Abstract

The landscape of delivering critically needed mental health counseling and other services has shifted dramatically during the COVID‐19 pandemic. Some see it as an earthquake, forever changing the topography of mental health service delivery. In fact, the acuity and frequency of mental health crises precipitated by isolation and recurrence of substance use during the COVID‐19 national health crisis resulted in 30% of U.S. adults reporting “symptoms consistent with depression or anxiety since April 2020.” (“Telehealth has played an outsized role meeting mental health needs during the COVID‐19 pandemic,” https://www.KFF.org, March 15, 2022). Telehealth was used in an attempt to bridge the gap of client needs during stay‐at‐home periods of isolation.

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