| Literature DB >> 31921754 |
Graciela Rojas1,2,3,4, Vania Martínez2,3,5, Pablo Martínez1,2,3, Pamela Franco3,6, Álvaro Jiménez-Molina2,3,4.
Abstract
The uneven distribution of mental health resources contributes to the burden of mental disorders in vulnerable groups, especially in developing countries. Internet-based interventions and digital technologies can contribute to reducing the gap between high prevalence of mental disorders, demand for treatment, and access to mental health care, thereby reducing inequities in mental health. This mini review summarizes the current state of the field of e-mental health research in Chile, showing its progress, limitations, and challenges. Internet-based interventions are at an early stage of development in Chile. The interventions included are heterogeneous in terms of participants (e.g., secondary students, patients, healthcare professionals) and contexts (e.g., rural, urban, schools, primary health care), aims, and modalities (e.g., website, online games). While these studies confirmed the feasibility of Internet-based interventions, the shortage of studies on effectiveness and cost-effectiveness makes it difficult to disseminate and scale up these Internet-based programs. However, the growing amount of knowledge accumulated in the Chilean context could guide practices in other developing countries for supporting the mental health of underserved populations.Entities:
Keywords: Internet; developing countries; digital technologies; e-mental health; primary health care; telemedicine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31921754 PMCID: PMC6933524 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2019.00391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1PRISMA Flow diagram. *PubMed: 20 records; Embase: 12 records; Scielo: 5 records. **Presentations in scientific congresses: 2 presentations; Personal contact: 3 drafts of preliminary results; Reported in other review: 1.
Description of studies.
| Rojas et al. ( | Public primary care centers/ | Depressive symptomatology/18-65 years old | Primary outcome: depressive symptoms (PHQ-9) | 16-h training program for primary care teams (detection, diagnosis, and treatment of depression) | Research team/web-based platform and call center | Two-arm, single-blind | Baseline and follow-up | 3, 6, and 12 months after baseline assessment |
| Carrasco ( | Private and public outpatient health centers patients and therapists/ | Mild or moderate depression/female adolescents (12–18 years old) | Acceptability scale | Online video game | Research team/web-based platform (patients); in person (therapists) | Acceptability study | Post-intervention | No |
| Espinosa et al. ( | Private outpatient clinic/ | Major depression (discharged patients)/ 18-65 years old | Acceptability and satisfaction questionnaire | Web-based program for supporting and monitoring of depressive patients after treatment; 9 months | Research team/web-based platform and e-mail | Feasibility and acceptability study | Post-intervention | No |
| Gaete et al. ( | Public primary schools/ | Bullying victims and perpetrators/5th and 6th grades (10-12 years old) | Primary outcomes: bullying and victimization (Revised Olweus Bully/Victim Questionnaire, OBVQ) | Ten 2-h lessons delivered by trained teachers, posters encouraging to support victims, discussion groups, online game; 1 year | Research team/in person | Three-arm, single-blind (blinded only to the outcome evaluator), cluster RCT | Baseline and post-intervention | No |
| Rojas et al. ( | Community hospitals located in rural areas/ | Major depressive disorder/18-70 years old | Primary outcome: depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory, BDI-I) | Remote supervision by a psychiatrist through an electronic platform and/or telephone; 6 months | Research team/online and phone call | Nonrandomized, open-label (blinded outcome assessor) trial, two-arm | Baseline and follow-up | 3 and 6 months after assignment |
| Martínez et al. ( | Public primary care centers/ | Major depressive disorder/13-19 years old | Primary outcome: depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory, BDI) | Remote collaborative depression care (primary health care teams received remote supervision by a psychiatrist through a shared electronic health record and phone patient monitoring); 3 months | Research team/online and phone call | Cluster randomized, assessor-blind trial, two-arm | Baseline and follow-up | 12 weeks |
| Mascayano et al. ( | Public high-schools/ | Suicidal ideation/14-18 years old | Primary outcome: Suicidality (Okasha Questionnaire) | Project Clan (web-based platform and mobile app to cultivate a community to promote protective psychological and social factors); 3 months | Psychologist as online counselor/web platform | Two-arm, cluster RCT; participative approach (peer-adolescent) | Baseline, post-intervention, and follow-up | 2 month |
| Martínez et al. (under review) | Public and semi-private high-schools from Chile and Colombia/ | Moderate depressive symptomatology/14-17 years old | Primary outcome: depressive symptoms (Patient Health Questioner, PHQ-9) | Stepped-care program according to PHQ-9 score: psychoeducational information, symptom monitoring with personalized automatic feedback, group forum and chat, reference to face-to-face attention if required; 12 weeks, with subsequent bi-monthly reinforcement sessions | Research team/email and chat | Feasibility and acceptability study | Baseline, post-intervention and follow-up | 6 months after intervention |
| Irarrázaval et al. (under review) | Public primary health care center | Children and adolescents living in substitute care facilities | Primary outcome: case resolutions (e.g. number of cases with positive resolution) | 90-minute online mental health supervision (diagnostic assistance, management guidance, assessment in referral to specialized services); twice a month for 6 months | Psychiatrist/ | Quasi-experimental design and acceptability study | Pre-post test | No |