| Literature DB >> 27349441 |
Nasser F BinDhim1, Eman M Alanazi, Hisham Aljadhey, Mada H Basyouni, Stefan R Kowalski, Lisa G Pont, Ahmed M Shaman, Lyndal Trevena, Tariq M Alhawassi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The objective of disease screening is to encourage high-risk subjects to seek health care diagnosis and treatment. Mobile phone apps can effectively screen mental health conditions, including depression. However, it is not known how effective such screening methods are in motivating users to discuss the obtained results of such apps with health care professionals. Does a mobile phone depression-screening app motivate users with high depressive symptoms to seek health care professional advice? This study aimed to address this question.Entities:
Keywords: depression; mental health; mobile phone; patients’ screening; public health informatics
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27349441 PMCID: PMC4962995 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.5726
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Screenshot of the app download page.
Figure 2Screenshots of the app.
Demographics.
| Characteristics | Total | |
| Age (median range) (years) | 27.0 (18-75) | |
| Sex | ||
| Female | 1143 (45.0) | |
| Male | 1395 (54.9) | |
| Country | ||
| Australia | 283 (11.2) | |
| Canada | 541 (21.3) | |
| United Kingdom | 1108 (43.7) | |
| United States | 497 (19.6) | |
| New Zealand | 109 (4.3) | |
| Education | ||
| Above high school | 1177 (46.4) | |
| High school or less | 1361 (53.6) | |
| Income level | ||
| Less than US $20,000/year | 1276 (50.3) | |
| US $21,000-49,000/year | 720 (28.4) | |
| More than US $50,000/year | 542 (21.4) | |
| Employment status | ||
| Employed | 1151 (45.4) | |
| Self-employed | 285 (11.2) | |
| Student | 593 (23.4) | |
| Unemployed | 509 (20.0) |
Country-based prevalence of undiagnosed higher risk of depression using the PHQ-9 threshold of 11.
| Country | ||||||
| Australia | Canada | New Zealand | United Kingdom | United States | Total | |
| Low depressive symptoms (PHQ 11) | 206 (67.3%) | 390 (71.8%) | 66 (72.5%) | 774 (69.9%) | 368 (74.0%) | 1804 (70.9%) |
| High depressive symptoms (PHQ 11) | 100 (32.7%) | 153 (28.2%) | 25 (27.5%) | 334 (30.1%) | 129 (26.0%) | 741 (29.1%) |
Health characteristics.
| Characteristics | Total | |
| Alcohol consumption | Never | 1218 (48.0) |
| 1-2 standard drinks/occasion | 648 (25.6) | |
| 3-4 standard drinks/occasion | 299 (11.8) | |
| 5+ standard drinks/occasion | 373 (14.6) | |
| Chronic disease | ||
| No | 1747 (68.8) | |
| Yes | 791 (31.2) | |
| Depression diagnosis | ||
| No | 1934 (76.2) | |
| Yes | 604 (23.8) | |
| High depressive symptoms | ||
| PHQ-9 cutoff of 11 or above | 741 (29.2) | |
| PHQ-9 less than cutoff of 11 | 1797 (70.8) | |
| Cigarette smoking | ||
| No | 1725 (67.9) | |
| Yes, 10 cigarettes or less/day | 352 (13.9) | |
| Yes, 11-20 cigarettes/day | 310 (12.2) | |
| Yes, 21 cigarettes or more/day | 151 (5.9) | |
| Attitude toward depression (Depression is a real illness) | ||
| Strongly agree/Agree | 2184 (86.1) | |
| Neutral | 262 (10.3) | |
| Strongly disagree/Disagree | 92 (3.6) | |
| Attitude toward anti-depressant medications (Do they help restore normal level of functioning?) | ||
| Strongly agree/Agree | 1107 (43.6) | |
| Neutral | 1089 (42.9) | |
| Strongly disagree/Disagree | 342 (13.4) | |
| Attitude toward counseling (Help restore normal level of functioning) | ||
| Strongly agree/Agree | 1407 (55.4) | |
| Neutral | 843 (33.2) | |
| Strongly disagree/Disagree | 288 (11.4) |