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Journal Article

Citation

Jobes DA, Crumlish JA, Evans AD. J. Psychother. Integr. 2020; 30(2): 226-237.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Educational Publishing Foundation)

DOI

10.1037/int0000208

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has created profound challenges for health care systems worldwide. The exponential spread of COVID-19 has forced mental health providers to find new ways of providing mental health services that maintain physical distance and keeps providers and patients at home limiting possible exposure to the deadly virus. The pandemic has thus sparked a sudden interest in providing mental health services via telepsychotherapy (otherwise known as telehealth or telemedicine). Telepsychotherapy care has some inherent challenges that must always be mastered by providers to render effective care. Previous research and professional guidelines understandably note possible concerns about providing telepsychotherapy care to high-risk suicidal patients in a remote location. The coronavirus pandemic now poses all new ethical concerns about the routine practice of having an acutely suicidal patient go to an emergency department and/or admitting such patients to an inpatient psychiatric unit (if the public health goal is to limit the spread of this deadly virus). To this end, this article describes a pandemic-driven effort to rapidly provide support, guidance, and resources to providers around the world to use a suicide-focused and evidence-based intervention called the Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality (CAMS) within a telepsychotherapy modality. Additional suicide-relevant resources are being made available to provide further guidance and support to mental health professionals worldwide. In the midst of a global pandemic, there are emerging ways to help reduce further loss of life to suicide through the medium of telepsychotherapy to provide effective clinical care that is suicide-focused and evidence-based. © 2020 American Psychological Association.


Language: en

Keywords

human; COVID-19; suicide; psychotherapy; pandemic; suicidal behavior; resource management; Article; mental health care personnel; evidence based practice; Suicide treatment; coronavirus disease 2019; Telepsychotherapy; Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality; e-counseling

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