# Mental Health Professionals’ Perceptions of Benefits and Disadvantages of Telehealth: International Mixed Methods Study

**Authors:** Madeline I Montoya, Cary S Kogan, Brigitte Khoury, José A García-Pacheco, Rebeca Robles, Tahilia J Rebello, Maya Kulygina, Geoffrey M Reed

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/75905 · Journal of Medical Internet Research · 2026-03-04

## TL;DR

Mental health professionals worldwide share their views on the pros and cons of telehealth, highlighting trade-offs between benefits like accessibility and challenges like technical issues.

## Contribution

This study provides a global perspective on telehealth in mental health care by combining quantitative and qualitative data from professionals across multiple regions and languages.

## Key findings

- Clinicians' main concerns include technical issues and loss of nonverbal cues in telehealth.
- Benefits of telehealth include improved accessibility, efficiency for clinicians, and enhanced clinical processes.
- Findings suggest a trade-off between telehealth's advantages and disadvantages, with variations based on profession and region.

## Abstract

Telehealth has become an integral component of mental health care delivery worldwide. Understanding provider perceptions is essential to guiding its continued implementation.

This international study used quantitative and qualitative methodologies to examine and broaden our understanding of the benefits and concerns related to telehealth for mental health care.

An internet-based survey was conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic between November 11 and December 18, 2020, among mental health professionals, primarily psychiatrists and psychologists, registered with the World Health Organization’s Global Clinical Practice Network. Clinicians completed the survey in 1 of 6 languages (Chinese, English, French, Japanese, Russian, or Spanish). Descriptive statistics and logistic regressions were used to analyze quantitative survey data on concerns and implementation of telehealth. Responses to an open-ended question about providers’ perspectives on the benefits of telehealth were analyzed qualitatively.

In total, 847 participants completed the telehealth section of the survey, and 496 provided a response to the open-ended question. Quantitative data on telehealth use and concerns revealed that clinicians’ primary concerns focused on technical issues and clinical effectiveness relative to in-person services, specifically, loss of clinical information (eg, nonverbal behavior) and challenges with establishing a therapeutic alliance. Findings varied by profession, World Health Organization region, and telehealth training and experience. Qualitative data examining benefits fell into 3 major areas: accessibility and reach of mental health services, efficiency and flexibility for clinicians, and enhancement of clinical processes and outcomes. Taken together, findings revealed a trade-off between telehealth benefits and disadvantages.

From the perspective of mental health professionals, telehealth practice comes with key challenges and valuable benefits. Findings offer important considerations for the implementation of telehealth systems, including the importance of training and education and balancing trade-offs to optimize care.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

47 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13000382/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13000382