| Literature DB >> 26259008 |
Abstract
Individuals seeking to change their alcohol use form a heterogeneous group with varied treatment goals-including moderation and abstinence-that therefore requires flexible treatment options. The availability of alcohol in the United States, and the pervasive social pressure to drink, warrant treatments that support individuals outside the treatment environment and that foster coping and self-regulation in the face of these demands. Emerging digital technologies show promise for helping both to hone therapies to clients' individual needs and to support clients in settings beyond the clinic. In the broader health care arena, digital health technologies (DHTs) are transforming how health professionals assess, prevent, and treat both physical and mental health problems. DHTs include assessments and interventions delivered via computer, Internet, mobile phone, and wireless or wearable device technologies. The emerging literature examining within-treatment and mobile DHTs highlights an opportunity to create personalized alcohol treatments for every person seeking care. Despite the promises DHTs may hold, however, there still are many potential risks to using them and a number of challenges regarding how to integrate them into treatment successfully. This article will review the current and potential advantages of DHTs in alcohol treatment and the technological, personal, organizational, and systemic limitations of integrating various technology-based assessment and intervention programs into care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26259008 PMCID: PMC4432853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alcohol Res ISSN: 2168-3492
DHT Examples, Including Some of the Most Common DHT Features, How They Can Be and Have Been Implemented in Alcohol Treatment Settings, and Some Basic Strengths of Each
| DHT Feature | Examples of Use | Strengths |
|---|---|---|
| Treatment-based Digital Kiosk (Computer, Tablet, etc.) | Intake and follow-up assessments, psycho-education, virtual reality, digital enhancement, and replacement interventions. | “Captive audience” with provider contact to foster adherence and support. Behind firewall for enhanced security and data processing. |
| Client Computer/Mobile (General) | See above/below. | Distal assessment and intervention in one’s natural environment. |
| Appointment reminders, Web links, group communications, natural-language processing. | Ubiquitous, inexpensive, high acceptability. | |
| Text (including SMS, or short message service) | Appointment reminders, ecological momentary assessment, JITAIs (just-in-time adaptive interventions), Web links, natural-language processing. | Ubiquitous, real-time contact, inexpensive, high acceptability. |
| Camera/Video | Telehealth, modeling, distal environmental monitoring, journaling, exposure, ambient environmental analysis. | Ubiquitous, contextual, nonverbal, distal. |
| Sound | Speech analysis, environmental sound. | Ambient passive acoustic sensing, contextual environmental cues. |
| Geolocation | Trigger alerts, activity scheduling, positive activities, proximal social connections. | Objective location data, passive, social connectivity. |
| Accelerometer/Gyroscope | Activity assessment, behavioral activation, sleep, movement, side effects, intoxication. | Passive, objective, quantifiable, multiple existing systems. |
| Proximity Sensors | Proximal social monitoring, alerts. | Specific phones within private networks. |
| Mobile/Web Data Analytics | Everyday data pattern analysis, increases and decreases in social interaction, app usage. | Passive monitoring of secondary data, low invasiveness and battery drain. |
| Wireless Physiological Sensors: (e.g., Heart Rate Variability, Add-ons) | Physiological reaction and arousal, ability to predict outcome with objective data, relapse and side effects. | Objective data, physiological reactions outside of awareness, contextualized self-report. |