AHP Creates New Tip Sheets on Best Practices for Providers Offering Teletherapy
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, traditional therapy sessions are swiftly moving to a teletherapy format. To help behavioral health providers with this massive shift, behavioral health experts at Advocates for Human Potential, Inc. (AHP) developed a three-part tip sheet series of best practices, skills and strategies for providing virtual behavioral health services. AHP created the tip sheets for the Central East Mental Health Technology Transfer Center, operated by the Danya Institute and funded by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). They are free to providers and available for download.
The tip sheets are:
- Teletherapy for Individual Services, focusing on best practices, skills and strategies for providing video- and phone-based services.
- Group Teletherapy, exploring technical requirements, environmental standards and logistical issues to consider when preparing for virtual group therapy sessions.
- Burnout and Virtual Fatigue in Teletherapy, offering strategies for ensuring behavioral health provider self-care and well-being.
Teletherapy brings the principles of therapeutic practice to a virtual format — via videoconference (Zoom or Skype, for example), by phone or by other online or electronic means, such as a patient portal, email or text-based messaging. It is not a subpar substitute for in-person sessions while we wait out physical distancing and state shutdowns; it is a viable and effective alternative to traditional in-person practice. By allowing clients to receive services at home, teletherapy reduces many barriers—in addition to the pandemic—that keep people from accessing behavioral health care.
These tip sheets will help providers ensure high-quality services and give them a sense of confidence as they migrate to a new form of therapeutic services.
Teletherapy eliminates so many barriers that can prevent clients from engaging in traditional care. It’s a critical tool in any clinician’s toolbox. I have delivered nonclinical services and received both clinical and nonclinical services via teletherapy, and although it may take a little getting used to if it’s new to you or your client, it can be just as effective as in-person visits, and in some cases even more so.
Kristen King, AHP’s Virtual Solutions Manager and Project Lead for the Tip Sheets
About Us
Advocates for Human Potential, Inc. (AHP) creates powerful solutions to improve health and human services systems. By partnering with the federal government, states, municipalities, healthcare systems, and nonprofits, we help people experiencing the greatest disadvantages lead full and productive lives. We are national leaders in training and technical assistance, research and evaluation, publishing, and dedicated consulting. On issues from workforce development to mental health, substance use disorders to housing and homelessness, we help our clients enhance behavioral health care through systems change. AHP was founded nearly 40 years ago to develop solutions for some of the biggest social infrastructure challenges across the nation. Our company has offices in metro Boston, Chicago, and Los Angeles. Find out more at www.ahpnet.com.
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