“…In comparison with routine or usual care (the typical control condition), telehealth interventions yielded significant benefits for persons with dementia (depressive symptoms) as well as for their caregivers (perceived competence). In addition, telehealth interventions show great promise as efficient, cost‐effective, and accessible strategies, which corresponds to past findings that telehealth appears to positively influence not only persons with dementia but also a wide range of other populations (i.e., stroke survivors, victims of heart failure or other cardiovascular diseases, adolescent sexual health, and HIV/AIDS survivors) (Saragih, Imanuel, Osingada, et al, 2021; Saragih, Imanuel, Porta, & Lee, 2021; Saragih, Tarihoran, Batubara, et al, 2021; Valkanova et al, 2017). More importantly, this suggests that including care delivery through telehealth modality may be a viable approach to guarantee continuity of care, address various care needs remotely, and promote favorable patient outcomes.…”