Journal
LIFE-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life13020360
Keywords
remote psychotherapy; psychotherapy via telephone; psychotherapy via videoconferencing; tele-health; e-mental-health; COVID-19; pandemic; psychotherapy; qualitative psychotherapy research; mixed-methods psychotherapy research
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This study investigated the changes experienced by Austrian therapists when switching to remote psychotherapy. The results show that remote therapy offered more flexibility and was appreciated as a way to continue treatment. However, there were also challenges such as limited sensory perceptions, technical problems, and signs of fatigue. Overall, remote psychotherapy seems to have been well accepted and beneficial for Austrian therapists in many settings.
The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated measures to contain the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus required a change in treatment format from face-to-face to remote psychotherapy. This study investigated the changes experienced by Austrian therapists when switching to psychotherapy at a distance. A total of 217 therapists participated in an online survey on changes experienced when switching settings. The survey was open from 26 June until 3 September 2020. Several open questions were evaluated using qualitative content analysis. The results show that the setting at a distance was appreciated by the therapists as a possibility to continue therapy even during an exceptional situation. Moreover, remote therapy offered the respondents more flexibility in terms of space and time. Nevertheless, the therapists also reported challenges of remote therapy, such as limited sensory perceptions, technical problems and signs of fatigue. They also described differences in terms of the therapeutic interventions used. There was a great deal of ambivalence in the data regarding the intensity of sessions and the establishment and/or maintenance of a psychotherapeutic relationship. Overall, the study shows that remote psychotherapy seems to have been well accepted by Austrian psychotherapists in many settings and can offer benefits. Clinical studies are also necessary to investigate in which contexts and for which patient groups the remote setting is suitable and where it is potentially contraindicated.
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