| Literature DB >> 31852455 |
Laura Martinengo1, Louise Van Galen1,2, Elaine Lum1,3, Martin Kowalski4, Mythily Subramaniam5,6, Josip Car7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are an estimated 800,000 suicides per year globally, and approximately 16,000,000 suicide attempts. Mobile apps may help address the unmet needs of people at risk. We assessed adherence of suicide prevention advice in depression management and suicide prevention apps to six evidence-based clinical guideline recommendations: mood and suicidal thought tracking, safety plan development, recommendation of activities to deter suicidal thoughts, information and education, access to support networks, and access to emergency counseling.Entities:
Keywords: Apps; Crisis helpline; Crisis intervention; Depression; Mobile applications; Suicide; Suicide prevention; Telemedicine; mHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31852455 PMCID: PMC6921471 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-019-1461-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1App selection flowchart
General attributes of apps
| Feature | DM ( | DM and SP | SP | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost of the app | |||||
| Free | 8 (40%) | 1 (33%) | 44 (98%) | 53 (77%) | |
| In-app purchases | 10 (50%) | 2 (67%) | 2 (2%) | 14 (20%) | |
| Paid | 2 (10%) | – | – | 2 (3%) | |
| App category on the app store | |||||
| Education | – | – | 18 (39%) | 18 (26%) | |
| Health & Fitness | 15 (75%) | – | 20 (44%) | 35 (51%) | |
| Lifestyle | 1 (5%) | 3 (100%) | – | 4 (6%) | |
| Medical | 4 (20%) | – | 8 (17%) | 12 (17%) | |
| App ratings | |||||
| Not enough ratings | – | 2 (67%) | 18 (39%) | 20 (29%) | |
| 1★–3.5★ | 2 (10%) | – | 5(11%) | 7 (10%) | |
| 3.5★–5★ | 18 (90%) | 1 (33%) | 23 (50%) | 42 (61%) | |
| Target group | |||||
| General population | 20 (100%) | 3 (100%) | 34 (74%) | 57 (83%) | 0.137 |
| Students | – | – | 9 (20%) | 9 (13%) | |
| Veterans | – | – | 3 (6%) | 3 (4%) | |
| Number of suicide prevention strategies | |||||
| 1–2 | 3 (15%) | 2 (67%) | 11 (24%) | 16 (23%) | 0.374 |
| 3 | 10 (50%) | – | 14 (30%) | 24 (35%) | |
| 4 | 5 (25%) | – | 12 (26%) | 17 (25%) | |
| 5 | 1 (5%) | 1 (33%) | 5(11%) | 7 (10%) | |
| 6 | 1 (5%) | – | 4 (9%) | 5 (7%) | |
| Directly connect to emergency helplines | |||||
| No | 11 (55%) | 1 (33%) | 10 (22%) | 22 (32%) | |
| Yes | 9 (45%) | 2 (67%) | 36 (78%) | 47 (68%) | |
| User can remain anonymous | |||||
| No | 7 (35%) | 1 (33%) | 3 (7%) | 11 (16%) | |
| Yes | 13 (65%) | 2 (67%) | 43 (93%) | 58 (84%) | |
| Password-protected account | |||||
| No | 8 (40%) | 1 (33%) | 37 (80%) | 46 (67%) | |
| Yes | 12 (60%) | 2 (67%) | 9 (20%) | 23 (33%) | |
| App crashes or malfunctions | |||||
| No | 17 (85%) | 3 (100%) | 37 (80%) | 57 (83%) | 0.857 |
| Yes | 3 (15%) | – | 9 (20%) | 12 (17%) | |
| App was created or commissioned by | |||||
| Government body, university | 2 (10%) | – | 19 (41%) | 21 (30%) | |
| NGO, healthcare providers | 10 (50%) | 3 (100%) | 18 (39%) | 31 (45%) | |
| Private developer | 8 (40%) | – | 9 (20%) | 17 (25%) | |
| Export data (pdf/excel/other) | |||||
| No | 12 (60%) | 3 (100%) | 42 (91%) | 57 (83%) | |
| Yes | 8 (40%) | – | 4 (9%) | 12 (17%) | |
DM depression management, SP suicide prevention; *In italics, statistically significant p values (< 0.05)
Strategies offered by the apps
| Type of strategies | DM | DM and SP | SP | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tracking of mood or suicidal thoughts | 17 (85%) | 1 (33%) | 10 (22%) | 28 (41%) |
| Safety plan development | 2 (10%) | – | 24 (52%) | 26 (38%) |
| Offer activities to deter suicidal thoughts | 15 (75%) | 1 (33%) | 17 (37%) | 33 (48%) |
| Information and education | ||||
| Suicide-related | 2 (10%) | 3 (100%) | 30 (65%) | 35 (51%) |
| Emergency contact information | 20 (100%) | 3 (100%) | 42 (91%) | 65 (94%) |
| Access to support networks | 2 (10%) | 1 (33%) | 25 (54%) | 28 (41%) |
| In-app access to emergency counseling | ||||
| By counselor | – | – | 9 (20%) | 9 (13%) |
| By emergency helpline | 9 (45%) | 1 (33%) | 36 (78%) | 46 (67%) |
DM depression management, SP suicide prevention
Examples of apps offering all six suicide prevention strategies
| Stay Alive [ | |
| ReMinder App [ | |
Inaccurate crisis helplines
An important feature often found in depression management and suicide prevention apps is the inclusion of a crisis helpline telephone number that would ideally activate a telephone call directly through the app. As part of our assessment, we checked the accuracy and functionality of the telephone numbers provided by the apps. Six apps, (two apps available in Android and iOS, and two Android apps) provided crisis helpline telephone numbers that were either non-existent (dummy number), non-functional (dialed number failed to connect users to the helpline), or the number provided was linked to an organization offering non-evidence-based treatments. Two of these apps, available in both app stores, had been downloaded more than one million times each. We informed app developers of our findings and two popular apps have since rectified the errors. Providing an uncontactable phone number, particularly to people going through an emergency, potentially risks the lives of highly vulnerable people and constitutes a severe breach of ethical standards. |
Number of apps in each category complying with HONcode principles
| HONcode principles | DM | DM and SP | SP | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 (40%) | 2 (67%) | 3 (7%) | 13 (19%) | ||
| 9 (45%) | 2 (67%) | 19 (41%) | 30 (43%) | 0.688 | |
| 14 (70%) | 3 (100%) | 27 (59%) | 44 (64%) | 0.327 | |
| 4 (20%) | – | 6 (13%) | 10 (14%) | 0.675 | |
| 8 (40%) | – | – | 8 (12%) | ||
| 20 (100%) | 3 (100%) | 43 (93%) | 66 (96%) | 0.605 | |
| 14 (70%) | 3 (100%) | 34 (74%) | 51 (74%) | 0.713 | |
| There was no advertisements in the assessed apps | |||||
DM depression management, SP suicide prevention; *In italics, statistically significant p values (< 0.05)