Equitable and Culturally Responsive Digital Rehabilitation Counseling in the United States: A Scoping Review of Policy Pathways
Cornelia Ifeoma Ejoh
*
University of the District of Columbia, 4200 Connecticut Ave NW, Washington, DC 20008, United States.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the digital transformation of mental health and rehabilitation counseling services in the United States. This shift has expanded access to care, but it has also exposed persistent inequities that affect underserved populations.
Objective: This scoping review maps policy pathways for equitable and culturally responsive mental-health support within digital rehabilitation counseling, and quantifies the evidence base supporting reform.
Methods: Using the Arksey and O'Malley framework and the PRISMA Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR), we identified, screened, and synthesized 88 sources published between 2020 and 2026 from PubMed, PsycINFO, Scopus, Google Scholar, and grey-literature repositories (WHO, FCC, HRSA, OECD, UNDP, NRHA). Descriptive statistics summarized source characteristics, a thematic coding matrix mapped eight policy-relevant themes, and a Pearson chi-square test examined associations between source type and thematic focus.
Results: Most sources (84.1%, n = 74) were peer-reviewed journal articles, and 10.2% (n = 9) were institutional or governmental reports; the remainder were preprints, textbooks, or news commentaries. Ninety-six percent of dated sources appeared in 2022 or later, with a median publication year of 2025. The most frequently addressed themes were tele-rehabilitation and telehealth (27.3%), AI and digital mental health (20.5%), disability and rehabilitation (15.9%), and digital equity (14.8%). Source type and dominant theme were significantly associated (χ²(8) = 18.42, p = .018): institutional reports clustered around digital-equity and workforce issues, while peer-reviewed studies emphasized clinical and AI-related questions.
Conclusions: The evidence base for digital rehabilitation counseling is growing rapidly but remains unevenly distributed across equity-critical themes. Sustainable reform calls for coordinated investment in broadband infrastructure, multilingual and disability-inclusive platform design, culturally responsive workforce development, ethical AI governance, and inclusive workforce reintegration, anchored in a “human-in-the-loop” model of care.
Keywords: Rehabilitation counseling, tele-rehabilitation, digital mental health, cultural responsiveness, digital equity