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Published Online: 13 July 2021

Telehealth Use for Mental Health Conditions Among Enrollees in Commercial Insurance

Telehealth use grew rapidly during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, but the extent to which it will persist after the pandemic is unclear (1, 2). We examined trends in the patterns of telehealth use for mental health conditions from January to June 2020.
We identified telehealth services in a national data set of commercial enrollees from FAIR Health, a nonprofit organization managing a database of >33 billion privately billed health insurance claims, submitted by >60 payers. We calculated telehealth use rates as a percentage of all mental health services by condition category by using the outpatient and inpatient claims for both telehealth and in-person services as a common denominator, which represented roughly 25 million unique claim-level procedures. The telehealth use rate for mental health conditions increased from 2.2% in January 2020 to 65.2% in April 2020, remaining stable at 65.6% in June 2020 (Table 1). Services for generalized anxiety disorder made up the largest share of mental health telehealth services (28.4%), followed by major depressive disorder (23.6%), and adjustment disorder (18.6%).
TABLE 1. Telehealth use in a commercially insured patient population, by demographic characteristics, January–June 2020a
 JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJune
CharacteristicN%N%N%N%N%N%
All mental health services115,7652.2223,2004.72,227,08147.82,973,14165.22,686,33064.91,383,53765.6
Mental health services by category      
 Age in years      
  0–187,164.622,9402.3401,38145.9541,22964.9465,50662.7224,85161.5
  19–249,3161.522,4683.9271,91047.1367,93765.0339,94864.6179,61264.9
  25–3428,1442.755,6815.6526,65150.7690,50267.5645,91668.3351,16470.1
  35–4427,6463.049,2665.8428,17149.0565,01365.7514,90666.0267,92267.6
  45–5424,1343.438,8916.0306,00347.0405,65763.7363,29163.4183,57264.3
  55–6416,8663.127,8775.7219,45046.3294,57363.4262,79762.8129,84763.1
  ≥652,4951.26,0773.273,51542.8108,23061.693,96660.446,56959.6
 Gender      
  Female84,4442.6155,3095.21,474,99549.41,957,58266.61,776,92366.3919,99767.1
  Male30,9441.667,4433.8738,52344.8996,04862.5889,51561.8448,60862.4
 Location      
  Rural6,5201.610,7192.8156,76143.7213,41260.5171,03553.672,79949.6
  Urban109,2452.3212,4814.92,070,32048.12,759,72965.62,515,29565.81,310,73866.8
Acute respiratory disease and infection care services76,2062.7109,1594.4476,30030.9258,85044.3118,78730.762,85728.1
a
Data are presented as a percentages of all telehealth and in-person services and are from an analysis of January–June 2020 data from FAIR Health. Telehealth services were identified through Medicare billing standards, relying on Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System codes, with place of service coded as “02” or Current Procedural Terminology code modifiers. The denominator included all telehealth and in-person services, defined as outpatient visits, consultations, preventive medicine visits, psychiatric diagnostic procedures, and other medical visits by medical condition category, determined with ICD-10-CM diagnosis categories. Rurality was determined with patients’ geozip, defined by the first three digits of a zip code.
In June 2020, telehealth use rates for mental health conditions were 67.1% among females and 62.4% among males and ranged from 59.6% for those ages ≥65 years to 70.1% for those ages 25–34 (Table 1). Moreover, 49.6% and 66.8% of all mental health services were via telehealth for patients in rural and urban areas, respectively. From April to June 2020, differences in telehealth rates between rural and urban areas grew from 5.1 to 17.2 percentage points, as telehealth use decreased among rural patients.
As COVID-19 shelter-in-place measures were relaxed across the United States, telehealth use for mental health conditions continued to account for nearly two-thirds of mental health services, while telehealth rates decreased 16.2 percentage points from April to June 2020 for services for acute respiratory diseases and infections, the service category with the next-highest telehealth use rate. This may have been due in part to other clinical conditions more frequently requiring general medical examinations for diagnostic purposes, as well as recent surges in direct-to-consumer mental health startups (3).
Telehealth-based mental health services increased overall, but future work might examine why uptake was lower in rural areas and among older individuals and how broadband infrastructure and digital literacy may affect telehealth use (4). As mental health digital interventions continue to proliferate, new evidence on the cost-effectiveness of telehealth may determine whether mental health services will still primarily be delivered remotely (5).

Footnote

The authors thank Robin Gelburd and Ali Russo from FAIR Health for their insights and contributions to this research project.

References

1.
Monthly Telehealth Regional Tracker. New York, FAIR Health, Inc. https://www.fairhealth.org/states-by-the-numbers/telehealth. Accessed December 1, 2020
2.
Mehrotra A, Chernew M, Linetsky D, et al: The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Outpatient Visits: Changing Patterns of Care in the Newest COVID-19 Hot Spots. New York, Commonwealth Fund, Aug 13, 2020. https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/2020/aug/impact-covid-19-pandemic-outpatient-visits-changing-patterns-care-newest. Accessed December 1, 2020
3.
Shah RN, Berry OO: The rise of venture capital investing in mental health. JAMA Psychiatry (Epub ahead of print, Sep 16 2020)
4.
Yoon H, Jang Y, Vaughan PW, et al: Older adults’ Internet use for health information: digital divide by race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status. J Appl Gerontol 2020; 39:105–110
5.
Shachar C, Engel J, Elwyn G: Implications for telehealth in a postpandemic future: regulatory and privacy issues. JAMA 2020; 323:2375–2376

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Psychiatric Services
Go to Psychiatric Services
Psychiatric Services
Pages: 239 - 240
PubMed: 34253038

History

Received: 22 October 2020
Revision received: 22 January 2021
Revision received: 15 March 2021
Accepted: 29 April 2021
Published online: 13 July 2021
Published in print: February 01, 2022

Keywords

  1. Telecommunications
  2. Coronavirus
  3. COVID-19
  4. Telehealth

Authors

Affiliations

Jiani Yu, Ph.D. [email protected]
Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City (Yu, Casalino); Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, and New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York City (Pincus). Tami L. Mark, Ph.D., and Alexander J. Cowell, Ph.D., are editors of this column
Lawrence Casalino, M.D., Ph.D.
Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City (Yu, Casalino); Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, and New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York City (Pincus). Tami L. Mark, Ph.D., and Alexander J. Cowell, Ph.D., are editors of this column
Harold Alan Pincus, M.D.
Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City (Yu, Casalino); Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, and New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York City (Pincus). Tami L. Mark, Ph.D., and Alexander J. Cowell, Ph.D., are editors of this column

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Yu ([email protected]).

Competing Interests

The authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Funding Information

Drs. Yu and Casalino acknowledge financial support through the Physicians Foundation Center for Physician Practice and Leadership at Weill Cornell Medicine.

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