“…It is noteworthy that clients’ inability to attend office-based treatment was the barrier (i.e., item on the Barriers to Child Trauma Treatment measure) most commonly reported both before and after the CBLCs. This finding suggests that innovative methods of treatment service delivery–such as community-based services (e.g., de Arellano, Waldrop, Deblinger, Cohen, Danielson, & Mannarino, 2005), integrated behavioral health care (Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute, 2016), use of tablets or iPads (Ruggiero, Saunders, Davidson, Cook & Hanson, in press) and telehealth services (Comer et al, 2015; Gloff, LeNoue, Novins, & Myers, 2015; Goldstein & Glueck, 2016)–may offer viable ways to increase access to treatment for abused and traumatized children. As one particularly relevant example, a recent study by Stewart and colleagues (2017) indicated that Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (Cohen et al, 2017), a child-focused EBT for trauma-related mental health problems, delivered via telehealth achieved treatment effects that were comparable to treatment delivered in an in-person, office-based setting, providing preliminary evidence for a promising approach to overcome service access barriers.…”