Mental Health Care Guidelines for Telemedicine During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Scoping Review.

Publication date: Jul 09, 2025

Mental health care providers have widely adopted telemedicine since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Some providers have reported difficulties in implementing telemedicine and are still assessing its sustainability for their practices. Recommendations, best practices, and guidelines for telemedicine-based mental health care (ie, telemental health care [TMH]) have been published, but the nature and extent of this guidance have not been assessed. We aimed to determine (1) the form of TMH guidelines and recommendations presented to providers, (2) the most commonly presented recommendations and guidelines, and (3) the perceived benefits and challenges of these TMH guidelines and recommendations. Through our scoping review of practice guidelines, we aimed to identify themes in TMH guidelines and clinical recommendations published between 2020 and 2024 in peer-reviewed journals. This review focused on the first 2 years of the COVID-19 pandemic to identify and characterize the available TMH guidance. We searched PubMed/MEDLINE and ScienceDirect for articles in peer-reviewed journals published between January 1, 2020, and July 16, 2024. We included articles that were available in English and presented recommendations, best practices, or guidelines for TMH. We excluded duplicates, articles unrelated to telehealth, brief editorial introductions, and those not publicly available. We applied the Healthcare Provider Taxonomy of the National Uniform Claim Committee to article titles and abstracts to identify records relevant to mental health. We used content and thematic analyses to identify key themes. Of the 1348 articles retrieved, we identified 76 that matched our criteria. Through content and thematic analyses, we identified 3 main themes-along with subthemes and topics-related to Facilitators, Concerns, and Changes Advised. The majority of articles called for further research (59/76) and for telemental health education and innovation in some form (43/76) regarding advised changes. Twenty-four articles included specific guidelines, recommendations, or checklists for providers. The results highlight the need for further large-scale research to support the development of effective guidelines and protocols for therapy plans. Although TMH care is widespread, scholarly work emphasizes the need for a stronger evidence base that includes testing protocols in diverse settings and populations. The results also underscore the importance of increasing health professionals’ knowledge of regulatory compliance and providing them with adequate TMH practice education.

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Concepts Keywords
January COVID-19
July COVID-19
Pandemic digital health
Sciencedirect effectiveness
Telehealth eHealth
guideline
health care
Humans
mental health
Mental Health Services
online care
online health
pandemic
Pandemics
SARS-CoV-2
scoping review
screening
telehealth
Telemedicine
telemedicine
telemental care
thematic analysis

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 Pandemic
drug DRUGBANK Methylphenidate
drug DRUGBANK Doxycycline
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
disease MESH Emergency
disease MESH privacy
disease MESH Substance Abuse
drug DRUGBANK Sulfanilamide
drug DRUGBANK Nonoxynol-9
disease IDO intervention
drug DRUGBANK Morpholinylmercaptobenzothiazole
disease MESH mental illnesses
disease MESH schizophrenia
disease MESH neurocognitive disorder
drug DRUGBANK Tretamine
disease IDO country
disease MESH physical barriers
disease IDO quality
disease IDO process
drug DRUGBANK Spinosad
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
disease MESH Autism
disease MESH Psychosis
disease MESH dementia
disease MESH communication disabilities
disease MESH depression
disease MESH Autism Spectrum Disorder
disease MESH Syndrome
disease IDO production
disease MESH stroke
disease MESH bipolar disorder
disease MESH Violence
disease MESH Weight Loss
disease MESH Obesity
disease MESH Epilepsy
disease MESH eating disorders
disease MESH bulimia nervosa
disease MESH binge eating disorder
pathway REACTOME Reproduction

Original Article

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