Sean R LeNoue’s research while affiliated with University of Colorado and other places

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Publications (1)


Telemental health for children and adolescents
  • Article

November 2015

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1,061 Reads

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126 Citations

International Review of Psychiatry

Nicole E Gloff

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Sean R LeNoue

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Douglas K Novins

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Kathleen Myers

Most children and adolescents across the USA fail to receive adequate mental health services, especially in rural or underserved communities. The supply of child and adolescent psychiatrists is insufficient for the number of children in need of services and is not anticipated to grow. This calls for novel approaches to mental health care. Telemental health (TMH) offers one approach to increase access. TMH programmes serving young people are developing rapidly and available studies demonstrate that these services are feasible, acceptable, sustainable and likely as effective as in-person services. TMH services are utilized in clinical settings to provide direct care and consultation to primary care providers (PCPs), as well as in non-traditional settings, such as schools, correctional facilities and the home. Delivery of services to young people through TMH requires several adjustments to practice with adults regarding the model of care, cultural values, participating adults, rapport-building, pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy. Additional infrastructure accommodations at the patient site include space and staffing to conduct developmentally appropriate evaluations and treatment planning with parents, other providers, and community services. For TMH to optimally impact young people's access to mental health care, collaborative models of care are needed to support PCPs as frontline mental health-care providers, thereby effectively expanding the child and adolescent mental health workforce.

Citations (1)


... Even in non-pandemic times, delivering psychological treatments remotely can have considerable advantages, including improving access to psychological interventions by reducing barriers such as travel distances and costs, conflicting schedules, and possibly stigma around being seen attending psychological services (Comer et al., 2014;Gloff et al., 2015). A systematic review and meta-analysis by Norwood et al. (2018) found video-delivered psychotherapy to be noninferior to face-to-face therapy in terms of target symptom reduction, however, the therapeutic alliance in video delivery was inferior to in-person delivery. ...

Reference:

Video Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET) with Children and Young People who Witnessed Domestic Violence: A Naturalistic Single Case Study Series
Telemental health for children and adolescents
  • Citing Article
  • November 2015

International Review of Psychiatry