
Telehealth Visit Toolkit: Using the MDQ Mood Disorder Questionnaire Remotely
Toolkit for remote mdq workflows covering secure sharing documentation tips and backup plans for low bandwidth
Telehealth teams lean on the MDQ to prep for video visits, yet remote workflows can fall apart when links break or patients cannot find the form. Use this lightweight toolkit to keep the process smooth from invite to charting.
Build a Repeatable Invite Template
When you schedule a virtual check in, send a single email that includes: a secure form link, a short explainer paragraph, and contact info if the patient needs tech help. Mention that the MDQ takes about five minutes so they know it will not derail their day.
Share Real Time Instructions
During the visit, screenshare the questionnaire if the patient struggled ahead of time. Walk through each section, describe the 13 yes or no prompts, and remind them to answer based on their most intense mood changes. When connectivity is shaky, switch to phone audio and keep the video camera off to preserve bandwidth while you verbally record their responses.
Document Clearly
Log the delivery method (portal, email, phone) and note who transcribed the answers. If the patient dictated responses, add a chart note that you read each item aloud and confirmed accuracy. This protects you during audits and reinforces consistency across staff.
Plan for Low Tech Situations
Some patients lack printers or stable Wi Fi. Offer to mail a paper MDQ with a prepaid return envelope or arrange a curbside pickup. For urgent cases, staff can fill out the form with the patient over the phone and upload the signed attestation to the EHR. Having that contingency plan keeps your screening rates high even when technology does not cooperate.
Trusted Bipolar & MDQ Resources
- Cleveland Clinic overview of the MDQ - Explains how clinicians score, interpret, and follow up on questionnaire results.
- NIMH guide to bipolar disorder - US research-backed summary of symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment planning.
- American Psychiatric Association bipolar overview - Outlines DSM-5 criteria, specifiers, and care pathways from the APA.
Author
Sarah Chen is a mental health researcher and content strategist focused on Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) education, bipolar screening workflows, and evidence-informed follow up care. As the lead writer for MDQTest resources, she translates clinical research into actionable guides that help clinics operationalize the MDQ across telehealth, primary care, and bilingual settings—without providing licensed clinical services.
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