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In this master's thesis I study access to mental health care during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic in Chile, where the health system rapidly included remote care as a complement to face-to-face care. First, using monthly consultation data by municipality and age group, I estimate a large drop of 53% in consultations during the first month and a monthly recovery rate of 4% until December 2021. This rate is 50% higher for young women aged 10-18 years. Second, using a counterfactual analysis, I document a 1% absolute drop in consultations between July 2020 and December 2021. These figures increase substantially among 15–54-year-old, and fall sharply among children and the elderly, in some cases decreasing by 40%. Third, leveraging variation in confinement measures across municipalities, I document that 3 additional days of confinement generate a 0.1% increase in monthly consultations with a higher response within older and younger women. My results are robust to individual and time fixed effects.
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