Literature DB >> 27594559

Using High-Risk Adolescents' Voices to Develop a Comprehensible Cognitive Behavioral Therapy-Based Text-Message Program.

Margaret M Thorsen1, John V Patena2, Kate Morrow Guthrie3, Anthony Spirito1,4, Megan L Ranney2,4.   

Abstract

At-risk adolescents' comprehension of, and preferences for, the content of a text-message (SMS) delivered, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)-based depression prevention intervention was investigated using two qualitative studies. Adolescents with depressive symptoms and a history of peer violence were recruited from an urban emergency department. Forty-one participants completed semi-structured qualitative interviews. Thematic analysis using deductive and inductive codes were used to capture a priori and emerging themes. Five major themes were identified: CBT-based messages resonated with at-risk adolescents; high levels of peer violence, comorbid symptoms, and prior exposure to the mental health system were variables affecting preferred content; participants endorsed emotional regulation messages, but found mindfulness content difficult to understand via SMS; cognitive awareness and restructuring content was most acceptable when framed by self-efficacy content; adolescent participants generated applicable CBT content in their own voices. Overall, CBT-informed content was able to be distilled into 160-character text messages without losing its comprehensibility.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adolescent; depression prevention; mobile health; qualitative; text messaging/SMS

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27594559      PMCID: PMC5336547          DOI: 10.1080/08964289.2016.1223597

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Med        ISSN: 0896-4289            Impact factor:   3.104


  47 in total

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Review 4.  Barriers to and Facilitators of User Engagement With Digital Mental Health Interventions: Systematic Review.

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