Telehealth News

Ohio Shelters Use Telehealth to Help Domestic Abuse Survivors Access Care

Funded by a SAMSHA grant, shelters in Toledo are launching a telehealth program aimed at offering telemental health services to those at risk of suicide, especially survivors of domestic abuse.

Telemental health

Source: ThinkStock

By Eric Wicklund

- An Ohio behavioral health clinic is using a federal grant of almost $2 million to expand telehealth services for domestic violence victims in need of counseling.

The Toledo-based Zepf Center is using the $1.8 million grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA) to create a connected health platform aimed at preventing suicide among adults 25 years old and older who have been impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. The program will focus on helping victims of domestic violence who have been struggling to access help because of the COVID-19 emergency.

Experts say the rate of domestic violence reports in the US has fallen during the pandemic, while it’s soaring in many other countries. That leads them to believe victims aren’t reporting assaults because they’re stuck at home with their abusers.

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