More and more practicioners are doing online long-term psychodynamic therapy. Dr. Joseph Burgo's a big proponent and I really respect his work, there are many others as well.
http://www.afterpsychotherapy.com/
I did a few years of face to face therapy in my teens, with mixed results depending upon the fit between us, and their individual competencies.
Now, 20 years later, I'm 1.5 years into a course of therapy that with a long-distance therapist who I specially selected. We meet online, do chat or email sessions, and phone sessions. I've found it highly effective. I believe the relationship, not the proximity, is most important, as long as the individual is well qualified and experienced, and those are things you already know and are comfortable with as you've already been seeing your psych in person.
Of course, with online therapy, there's no touch. That matters more to some than others, but the psychologist can still see facial expressions with Skype which is significant, and even with phone/voice/text only I've felt attuned with and comfortable with my therapist being able to understand enough, but I am mindful of describing things to her she can't see, such as my body language, etc.