Interesting variation in opinions.
My starting bias is actually liking people. I like interacting with patients. I chose group private practice so I could work with a wide range of employed people who can afford to see me with their insurance.
I'm exclusively telepsych. From an actual office. That functions more like video studio set. Very occasionally someone will want to come in. And it's a refreshing change. But they all mostly want to do telepsych. No one wants to come across town, find parking, rush to their appt, stressed out. Many are not even local to my part of our state.
Pro's:
1. Efficiency: Efficiency of in/out process. No wasted time ushering people about. More face to face time working on their issues. Efficiency of referencing chart, medication history. All with a semblance of eye contact. I would never type or look a chart while talking to a live person. Efficient time management. I can see my next client in the digital waiting room. That's my curtain call.
2. Multi-media integration: I can use video, graphics, charts, drawing on top of them with my ipad, integrate slides, etc. If you're dialed out like a potato head on facetime you're not grasping the advantages of digital multi-media integration.
3. Access: I'm seeing rural patients while living in a metro area. I like the diversity. They are so appreciative of being able to see a psychiatrist.
4. Geographic flexibility: Psychologically I like separating work from home. But I like the idea that if I needed to care for a sick relative back home or something, I could continue to work remotely while doing so, uninterrupted.
5. Safety (also lack of ripe smells): That manic intake is a lot less sketch. I don't have to breath people's cigarette-cat pee soaked cardigan that hasn't been washed since the Reagan administration.
____________________________________
Cons:
1. Loss of some element of connection: I don't get the extreme sense of this. I think our social intelligence evolved from reading faces to a large degree. But I can respect this purist point of view.
2. Loss of body language appreciation
3. Loss of physical presence for vibe detection and possibly loss of important medical information of physicality.
4. Medical-legal uncertainty: I personally don't think you can put this particular genie back in the bottle. But it certainly concerns me that my whole practice is telemedicine.
5. More transient, transactional sense of being replaceable with another shrink on the screen.
_______________________
All in all. This is the future of medicine. I think that's what makes us emotional about this. It's a new way of doing things that has rapidly and unexpectedly gained primacy.
I'm diving in headlong. Using technology and having a ball.
Don't knock it until you've tried embracing its potential instead of begrudging it.