Published on in Vol 8, No 8 (2021): August

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/29671, first published .
Mental Health Service User and Worker Experiences of Psychosocial Support Via Telehealth Through the COVID-19 Pandemic: Qualitative Study

Mental Health Service User and Worker Experiences of Psychosocial Support Via Telehealth Through the COVID-19 Pandemic: Qualitative Study

Mental Health Service User and Worker Experiences of Psychosocial Support Via Telehealth Through the COVID-19 Pandemic: Qualitative Study

Journals

  1. McQueen M, Strauss P, Lin A, Freeman J, Hill N, Finlay-Jones A, Bebbington K, Perry Y. Mind the distance: experiences of non-face-to-face child and youth mental health services during COVID-19 social distancing restrictions in Western Australia. Australian Psychologist 2022;57(5):301 View
  2. Seidler Z, Wilson M, Oliffe J, Kealy D, Ogrodniczuk J, Walther A, Rice S, Al-Yateem N. “I could hang up if the practitioner was a prat”: Australian men’s feedback on telemental healthcare during COVID-19. PLOS ONE 2022;17(12):e0279127 View
  3. Konteh F, Mannion R, Jacobs R. IT and the Quality and Efficiency of Mental Health Care in a Time of COVID-19: Case Study of Mental Health Providers in England. JMIR Formative Research 2022;6(12):e37533 View
  4. Schneider S, Ross A, Boskey E. ‘We are essential:’ Pediatric health care social workers’ perspectives on being designated essential workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. Social Work in Health Care 2022;61(1):36 View
  5. Ogunseitan A, Smith M. Telehealth: An Avenue for Expanding Access to Specialist Palliative Care. The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety 2022;48(12):625 View
  6. Balcombe L, De Leo D. Digital Mental Health Amid COVID-19. Encyclopedia 2021;1(4):1047 View
  7. Bäuerle A, Jahre L, Teufel M, Jansen C, Musche V, Schweda A, Fink M, Dinse H, Weismüller B, Dörrie N, Junne F, Graf J, Skoda E. Evaluation of the E-Mental Health Mindfulness-Based and Skills-Based “CoPE It” Intervention to Reduce Psychological Distress in Times of COVID-19: Results of a Bicentre Longitudinal Study. Frontiers in Psychiatry 2021;12 View
  8. Farrer L, Clough B, Bekker M, Calear A, Werner-Seidler A, Newby J, Knott V, Gooding P, Reynolds J, Brennan L, Batterham P. Telehealth use by mental health professionals during COVID-19. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 2023;57(2):230 View
  9. Leeming D, Lucock M, Shibazaki K, Pilkington N, Scott B. The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Those Supported in the Community with Long-Term Mental Health Problems: A Qualitative Analysis of Power, Threat, Meaning and Survival. Community Mental Health Journal 2022;58(7):1297 View
  10. Barwise A, Huschka T, Woo C, Egginton J, Huang L, Allen J, Johnson M, Hamm K, Wolfersteig W, Phelan S, Allyse M. Perceptions and Use of Telehealth Among Diverse Communities: Multisite Community-Engaged Mixed Methods Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2023;25:e44242 View
  11. Kowalski E, Schneider A, Zipfel S, Stengel A, Graf J. SARS-CoV-2 Positive and Isolated at Home: Stress and Coping Depending on Psychological Burden. Frontiers in Psychiatry 2021;12 View
  12. McMahon G, Douglas A, Casey K, Ahern E. Disruption to well-being activities and depressive symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic: The mediational role of social connectedness and rumination. Journal of Affective Disorders 2022;309:274 View
  13. Rosen B, Preisman M, Read H, Chaukos D, Greenberg R, Jeffs L, Maunder R, Wiesenfeld L. Providers’ perspectives on implementing resilience coaching for healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. BMC Health Services Research 2022;22(1) View
  14. Kaba D, Salwi S, Daniel N, Polenick C. ‘I feel like this will never end’: mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic among older adults with chronic conditions. Aging & Mental Health 2023;27(8):1576 View
  15. Brandon L, Fragkiadaki E. ‘It made me a more resilient therapist’: A qualitative study on practitioners’ experience of providing mental health services during the pandemic. QMiP Bulletin 2023;1(35):11 View
  16. Honey A, Hines M, Barton R, Berry B, Gilroy J, Glover H, Hancock N, Waks S, Wells K. Preferences for telehealth: A qualitative study with people accessing a new mental health service. DIGITAL HEALTH 2023;9 View
  17. Hewa Koneputugodage E, Reay R, Looi J. COVID-19 medicare benefits schedule telehealth for private psychiatric outpatient care in Victoria, Australia. Australasian Psychiatry 2023;31(4):528 View
  18. Officer T, Tait M, McBride-Henry K, Burnet L, Werkmeister B. Mental Health Client Experiences of Telehealth in Aotearoa New Zealand During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Lessons and Implications. JMIR Formative Research 2023;7:e47008 View