| Literature DB >> 24594922 |
Sylvia Deidre Kauer1, Cheryl Mangan, Lena Sanci.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Young people regularly use online services to seek help and look for information about mental health problems. Yet little is known about the effects that online services have on mental health and whether these services facilitate help-seeking in young people.Entities:
Keywords: Internet; adolescent; information seeking behavior; medical informatics; mental disorders; mental health; systematic review; young adult
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24594922 PMCID: PMC3961801 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.3103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Exclusion criteria.
| Criteria | Description |
| Over 25 years of age | Depending on how age was described in the study, studies were excluded when over 25% of participants in the study were not young people between the ages of 14 and 25 years (per Gulliver [ |
| Not mental health | The outcome addressed was a health outcome other than mental health (eg, diabetes, heart disease). |
| Not Web-based | There was no technological component discussed such as online mental health services. |
| Unrelated technology | The online program did not specifically explore mental health (eg, the effects of popular computer games or social networking sites on mental health outcomes). Online forums were excluded except when they were specifically dealing with mental health issues (eg, forums specifically for young people with depression). |
| Electronic medical records | The program was an electronic system to keep medical records. |
| No evaluation | The paper described the program but did not evaluate help-seeking behavior, attitudes, or intentions. |
| Not a study | The paper was not a study (ie, a review paper or discussion piece). Any relevant studies in reference lists were included. |
| Third-party program | The study focused on a third party seeking help for the young person (eg, parent or teacher). |
The pre-determined form used to code the selected studies.
| Reference | Authors’ names, research group (including the department, organization, and country), and the year published |
| Sample | Number of participants, age of participants (either mean and standard deviation, range, or percentage of young people), percentage of female participants, population targeted (ie, mental health status or risk profile) |
| Study design | Qualitative or quantitative (cross-sectional, quasi-experimental, longitudinal, RCT) |
| Program | Type of online mental health services examined (eg, information website, discussion forums, screening tool, online therapy) |
| Outcome | Outcomes studied (ie, mental health or help-seeking outcomes, user satisfaction, economic evaluation), the measures used to assess the outcome, and summary statistics reported |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram for inclusion into the review.
Study type, target group, service evaluated, sample, study design, and findings related to help-seeking of the included studies.
| Study | Target group / online service | Sample / designa | Help-seeking findings | |
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| Eichenberg [ | Message board posts were examined from adolescents who used the forum “Selbstmord” and users completed a survey | N=164 | 38/164 (23%) answered “yes” to the question “did you use the forum in order to obtain information about professional help?” | |
| Kummervold et al [ | Users of the forums Doktor Online & SOL Helse completed a survey | N=492 | 19/165 (6%) answered “yes” to the question “did participating in the forum increase your use of traditional services?” | |
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| Shandley et al [ | Young Australians who registered to play ReachOut Central | N=266 | A significant increase in willingness to seek help was found from pre-test (male mean 4.01 [SD 2.98]; female mean 4.17 [SD 2.69]) to post test (male mean 4.39 [SD 3.13], female mean 5.04 [SD 2.99]); | |
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| Bradley et al [ | Pilot study with 15-18 year olds with no previous mental illness scoring below severe on the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale completed the Feeling Better Program | N=13 | Participants qualitatively expressed that they thought the online mental health service improved accessibility to help | |
| Clarke et al [ | Depressed and non-depressed 18-24 year olds were recruited and randomized into an online self-help program or treatment as usual | N=160 | The chi-square test revealed no significant difference for mental health visits between the intervention (mean 1.3 [SD 3.1]) and the control group (mean 0.9 [SD 2.7]). | |
| Davis-McCabe & Winthrop [ | Pilot study of university students who used the Computer Aided Lifestyle Management program | N=9a
| Participants “saw the program as a useful tool that aids further self-help” (p. 51) | |
| Gulliver et al [ | Elite athletes were randomized into three versions of an online self-help program: mental health literacy and de-stigmatism, a feedback condition about symptoms, or a minimal content condition involving a list of help-seeking resources or a waitlist control group | N=59 | No difference in help-seeking behavior was found between any of the intervention groups and the control group over time (mental health literacy/destigmatization OR 57.38, 95% CI 0.85-3868.09, | |
| Collin et al [ | Young people who used ReachOut.com completed a survey | N=2291 | 546/1552 (35.2%) of participants said “yes” to “Did ReachOut.com help you ask a professional for help?” | |
| Costin et al [ | Random representative sample of 19-24 year olds recruited through a postal mail-out randomized to (1) receiving brief, (2) advanced or (3) non-related depression health e-cards | N=348 | No increase was found in help-seeking on the AHSQ for formal (OR 1.17, χ2
1=0.14, | |
| Klein et al [ | Drug and alcohol users who accessed at least 1 of 14 drug and alcohol websites completed a survey | N=1214 | 336/994 (38.8%) of participants indicated a preference for websites with email support from a therapist | |
| Nicholas [ | Young people who used ReachOut.com completed a survey | N=1016b
| 386/1016 (38%) of participants said yes to “Are you more likely to talk to a mental health professional after visiting ReachOut.com?” | |
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| Kim et al [ | University students used a Web-based self-screening and referral system and completed a survey | N=2700 | 43/57 (75.4%) of participants said “yes” to “Did the screening tool help you make your decision to see a mental health care professional?” | |
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| Burns et al [ | Random representative sample of 12-15 year olds via telephone were asked their opinions about online mental health services | N=2000 | 70/227 (30.8%) of participants said “yes” to “Have you ever used the Internet to find information for a mental health, alcohol, or other substance use problem?” | |
| Feng & Campbell [ | University students were asked their opinions about online mental health services | N=176 | 77/176 (44%) of participants said “yes” to “Have you used the Internet in the past to learn about personal feelings, anxiety, sadness, or confusion?” | |
| Gould et al [ | High school students were asked their opinions about online mental health services | N=519 | 94/519 (18%) of participants said “yes” to “In the past 12 months, did you use the Internet to seek help when you felt very upset, sad, stressed or angry?” | |
| Harris et al [ | University students were asked about the online mental health services used to seek help for suicidal ideation | N=64 | 24/64 (37.5%) of participants said “yes” to “How likely would you be to use a help-site?” | |
| Horgan & Sweeney [ | University students completed a survey about their opinions about online mental health services | N=922 | 267/867 (30.8%) of participants said “yes” to “Have you used the Internet for mental health information?” | |
| Neal et al [ | University students were asked their opinions about online tools | N=1308 | 698/1308 (53%) of participants said “yes” to “Have you used the Internet in the past for information on mental health when sad, anxious or confused?” | |
aCS=cross-sectional; QUAL=qualitative study; QUASI=quasi-experimental.
bPercentage of females not provided.
Figure 2Age range and means for each study, with target age range indicated (mean age was not reported for some studies; end age range exceeded 30 years for the Klein study [70 years]).
Barriers and facilitators of online mental health resources.
| Theme (n) | Findings | |
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| Lack of awareness (3) | Young people reported a lack of awareness of the online mental health services available [ | |
| “Many participants commented that they would not have thought to look for online distress-management programs” (Bradley et al [ | ||
| Young people most commonly used text-based search engines and information sites and were either not aware of other online mental health resources [ | ||
| Online mental health services are not everyone’s preferred source (2) | Young people were more likely to seek help from informal sources such as friends and parents when compared to Internet resources [ | |
| Some young people preferred face-to-face services to Internet services [ | ||
| Males don’t seek help online (3) | Young men were less likely to seek help using online mental health services than young women (χ2=8.6, | |
| After playing ReachOut Central [ | ||
| Gould et al [ | ||
| Lack of motivation (1) | Some distressed young people would not be motivated to seek help on or offline. “You have to want to help yourself” [ | |
| Not confidential / impersonal (1) | Online mental health services were reported by some participants [ | |
| Content unfavorable (2) | Information websites can to be too technical to understand [ | |
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| Accessibility of online mental health resources (5) | 67.3% of users agreed that ReachOut was “there when they need it” [ | |
| In the qualitative study by Bradley et al [ | ||
| Late night Internet usage is another benefit to online mental health services [ | ||
| Anonymity (4) | In one study [ | |
| In another study [ | ||
| Bradley et al [ | ||
| Trust/credibility (1) | Only one study [ | |
| Reduction of stigma (3) | The results from Gulliver et al [ | |
| One study [ | ||
| Sharing personal information (5) | Two benefits of discussion forums were mentioned: (1) reading and posting on discussion forums demonstrated to young people that there are other people going through similar problems and that they were not alone [ | |
| Some of the reasons for using the Internet for mental health support in Horgan and Sweeney’s study [ | ||
| Interestingly, two studies indicate an association between distress and help-seeking online [ | ||
| High distress (2) | Participants in Davis-McCabe and Winthrop’s study [ | |
| Similarly, young people who were functionally impaired (ie, scoring >16 on the CIS) were more likely than unimpaired to seek information online (34% versus 20.6%; χ2=7.4, | ||
| Increase of mental health literacy (8) | Eight studies explored mental health literacy. Participation in the mental health literacy/destigmatization condition in Gulliver et al’s study [ | |
| Users reported that ReachOut.com contributed to their knowledge about mental health issues: 43.3% learned skills, knowledge, and confidence to seek help if they needed it [ | ||
| Neal et al [ | ||
| Forum users believed the forum increased their knowledge and understanding of mental problems, health care services, their rights, and what they could expect from health services [ | ||
| ReachOut Central, however, was not associated with an increase in mental health literacy for males or females [ | ||
User experience of online services.
| Theme (n) | Overall percentage (n/N) | Individual studies percentage (n/N) |
| Somewhat to very helpful (6) | 65.50% (1156/1765) | 85.96% (98/114) [ |
| 78.11% (571/731) [ | ||
| 55.35% (383/692) [ | ||
| 50.88% (29/57) [ | ||
| 45.74% (43/94) [ | ||
| 41.56% (32/77) [ | ||
| Somewhat to very satisfied (3) | 90.35% (796/881) | 93.57% (684/731) [ |
| 71.28% (67/94) [ | ||
| 80.36% (45/56) [ | ||
| Would recommend to a friend (4) | 71.94% (1838/2555) | 88.20% (157/178) [ |
| 84.95% (621/731) [ | ||
| 65.98% (1024/1552) [ | ||
| 38.90% (36/94) [ | ||
| Received the information they wanted (2) | 52.18% (1595/3057) | 49.11% (359/731) [ |
| 50.68% (596/1176) and 55.65% (640/1150) found it within 5 to 15 minutes [ | ||
| Ease of use (2) | 91.91% (216/235) | 98.25% (56/57) [ |
| 89.89% (160/178) [ | ||
| Would continue to use (2) | 86.38% (279/323) | 89.29% (50/56) [ |
| 86.09% (229/266) [ |
Assessment of bias for each study.
| Study | Research group | Year published | Qualitya |
| Bradley et al [ | IWK Health Centre, Canada | 2012 | 11.5 |
| Burns et al [ | Inspire Foundation Australia | 2010 | 19 |
| Clarke et al [ | Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, United States | 2009 | 34 |
| Collin et al [ | Inspire Foundation Australia | 2011 | 19.5 |
| Costin et al [ | Centre for Mental Health Research, Australian National University, Australia | 2009 | 34 |
| Davis-McCabe & Winthrop [ | Counselling Psychology, Teeside University, United Kingdom | 2010 | 6 |
| Eichenberg [ | Institute of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, University of Cologne, Germany | 2008 | 16 |
| Feng & Campbell [ | Department of Health Science, University of Sydney, Australia | 2011 | 21.5 |
| Gould et al [ | Columbia University, United States | 2002 | 19.5 |
| Gulliver et al [ | Centre for Mental Health Research, Australian National University, Australia | 2012 | 34 |
| Harris et al [ | School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Australia | 2009 | 17.5 |
| Horgan & Sweeney [ | Brookfield Health Science Complex, University College Cork, Ireland | 2010 | 20 |
| Kim et al [ | Department of BioEngineering, University of Washington, United States | 2011 | 19 |
| Klein et al [ | National eTherapy Centre, Swinburne University, Australia | 2010 | 17 |
| Kummervold et al [ | Norwegian Centre for Telemedicine, University Hospital of North Norway | 2002 | 16 |
| Neal et al [ | Faculty to Information and Media Studies, University of Western Ontario, Canada | 2011 | 17 |
| Nicholas [ | Inspire Foundation Australia | 2010 | 11 |
| Shandley et al [ | National eTherapy Centre, Swinburne University, Australia | 2010 | 24.5 |
aAverage score on the Quality Rating Scale between the two raters.