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A comparative study reveals a similar validity of telepsychiatry and face-to-face psychiatric assessment in emergency room setting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2021

M. Bistre*
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
R. Eitan
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
O. Linkovsky
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
I. Barash
Affiliation:
Eitanim Direction, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
A. Juven-Wetzler
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
G. Katz
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
Y. Kohn
Affiliation:
Children And Adolescent Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
D. Argo
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
R. Teplitz
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
N. Fastovsky
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
M.-M. Said
Affiliation:
Research Unit, Jerusalem Mental Health Center, HaRav Rafael Katzenelbogen, Israel
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

Telepsychiatry (TP) can provide an alternative to traditional face-to-face (FTF) assessments. However, TP in the emergency room setting is much less prevalent, probably due to lack of solid evidence about its effectiveness and acceptability.

Objectives

To directly compare traditional FTF and TP modalities in the emergency room setting.

Methods

Psychiatric patients (n=38) presented to the emergency room went through traditional in-person and videoconference TP interviews in varying order. Both FTF and TP interviewers that examined the patients as well as a third psychiatrist, acting as an observer for both modalities, determined the diagnosis, disposition recommendation and indication for involuntary admission.

Results

Rater decisions had a high matching on disposition and indication for involuntary admission (Cohen’s Kappa (CK) of 0.84/0.81, 0.95/0.87 and 0.89/0.94 for FTF-TP, Observer-FTF and Observer-TP, respectively). Although identical diagnosis matching between the raters was relatively low, the partial diagnosis matching was high (CK of 0.52/0.81, 0.52/0.85 and 0.56/0.85 for FTF-TP, Observer-FTF and Observer-TP, respectively). Telepsychiatry assessments had comparable acceptability in items such as psychiatrists’ certainty and interviewers’ and patients’ satisfaction.

Conclusions

TP and FTF psychiatric assessments in the emergency room settings have similar validity and acceptability. Implementation of TP in emergency room settings might improve the mental health services’ quality and access especially for remote populations. TP is especially important during the COVID-19 pandemic to enable treatment for epidemiologically isolated patients and to protect the medical personnel.

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Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the European Psychiatric Association
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