Care navigation addresses issues of tele-mental health acceptability and uptake in rural and remote Australian communities

PLoS One. 2024 Apr 4;19(4):e0298655. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0298655. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Introduction: People living in rural and remote areas face substantial barriers to accessing timely and appropriate mental health services. In the Bowen Basin region of Queensland, Australia, barriers include: limited local providers, long waiting lists, unreliable telecommunication, and reluctance to trial telehealth. Isaac Navicare is a new, community co-designed care navigation service which addresses these barriers by coupling care navigation with supported telehealth, and referrals to mental health providers and other supports. We aimed to understand the reach and effectiveness of Isaac Navicare in improving access to mental health services and address an evidence gap on strategies for improving telehealth acceptability.

Methods: This mixed-methods implementation science evaluation used the RE-AIM Framework. It involved a client database review, survey and semi-structured interviews with service users during the 12-month pilot from November 2021.

Results: 197 clients (128 adults, 69 minors) were referred to Navicare during the pilot. Half of adult clients were unemployed, meaning referral options were limited to low-cost or bulk-billed services. Participants described Navicare as supportive and effective in helping to access timely and appropriate mental health supports. Most clients who expressed a treatment modality preference selected face-to-face (n = 111, 85.4%), however most referrals were for telehealth (n = 103, 66.0%) due to a lack of suitable alternatives. The rapport and trust developed with the care navigator was critical for increasing willingness to trial telehealth. Barriers to telehealth included privacy issues, technical difficulties, unreliable internet/phone, and perceived difficulties developing therapeutic rapport. The supported telehealth site was under-utilised. The majority (88.3%, n = 182) of referrals to Navicare were from local health or community service providers or schools.

Discussion: Coupling supportive, individualised care navigation with tele-mental health provider options resulted in increased uptake and acceptance of telehealth. Many barriers could be addressed through better preparation of clients and improving promotion and uptake of the supported telehealth site.

Conclusion: Attitudes towards telehealth have changed during the COVID-19 pandemic, however although the need exists, barriers remain to uptake. Telehealth alone is not enough. Coupling telehealth with other supports such as care navigation improves acceptance and uptake.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Australia
  • Humans
  • Mental Health
  • Pandemics
  • Rural Health Services*
  • Telemedicine*

Grants and funding

Service Delivery: Since 2020, Mitsubishi Development Pty Ltd has funded the service development and delivery of Isaac Navicare.Additional service delivery funding was received from BHP in 2022 to employ an additional care navigator. Research: This study was funded by a donation by Mitsubishi Development Pty Ltd of $25,000.00. The service delivery and research funding supported the salary of authors KM and CG. The funder did not have any additional role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. The specific role of these authors is outlined in the ‘author contributions’ section.