| Literature DB >> 32721922 |
Melvyn Zhang1, Helen Elizabeth Smith1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the four months after the discovery of the index case of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), several studies highlighted the psychological impact of COVID-19 on frontline health care workers and on members of the general public. It is evident from these studies that individuals experienced elevated levels of anxiety and depression in the acute phase, when they first became aware of the pandemic, and that the psychological distress persisted into subsequent weeks. It is becoming apparent that technological tools such as SMS text messages, web-based interventions, mobile interventions, and conversational agents can help ameliorate psychological distress in the workplace and in society. To our knowledge, there are few publications describing how digital tools have been used to ameliorate psychological symptoms among individuals.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; anxiety; depression; digital health; digital tool; distress; mental health; psychiatry; psychology; stress
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32721922 PMCID: PMC7446713 DOI: 10.2196/19706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Overview of the studies identified in the literature search.
| Study | Year | Mechanism of delivery of digital tools | Identified digital tools and prior evaluations | Availability |
| Agyapong et al [ | 2020 | SMS text messaging (specific to COVID-19a) | Text4Hope (specific to COVID-19) enables subscribers to receive 3 months of daily supportive SMS text messages with or without web links to web-based mental health resources. | Only available to individuals living in Alberta, Canada. |
| Rodriguez-Pulido et al [ | 2020 | Web-based Interventions | Beating the Blues is a web-based intervention for depressive disorder. | Available to users in the United Kingdom. |
| Burger et al [ | 2020 | Web-based interventions | Living Life to the Full (2 comparative trials were performed involving a total of 659 participants), Deprexis (6 comparative trials were performed involving a total of 1863 participants), and SHADE (3 comparative trials performed involving a total of 475 participants) were evaluated. moodgym was extensively evaluated, with a total of 11 comparative trials involving a total of 7294 participants. All the above interventions have been evaluated as websites that provide psychological therapy for depressive disorders. | The websites for Living Life to the Full, Deprexis, and moodgym can be accessed. |
| Anderson et al [ | 2019 | Web-based interventions | The Interapy program from the Netherlands was highlighted as a program that assisted individuals with symptoms of depression, panic disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and burnout. moodgym was also highlighted as a commercially available option for anxiety and depression. | The websites for moodgym and Interapy can be accessed. |
| Miralles et al [ | 2020 | Mobile interventions | 7 Cups, Be Good to Yourself, Bluewatch, Dcombat, Get Happy Program, Headgear, iCare Prevent, MedLink, Mobile Sensing and Support, Moodhacker, Moodivate, MyGamePlan, PRIME-D, Push-D, SocioEmpathy, SPSRS, SuperBetter, The Sound Advice, Thought Challenger, TODAC, Kokoro-App, Agoraphobia free, Stress Free, Angesthjalpen, AnxietyCoach, CBT Assistant, Challenger, Lantern, Psych Assist, Public Speech Trainer, SmartCAT, and GET.ON.PAPP have been previously evaluated and reported in published research. | Headgear, MoodHacker, SuperBetter, Thought Challenger, Angesthjalpen, AnxietyCoach, and SmartCAT are commercially available. |
| Gaffney et al [ | 2019 | Conversational agents or chatbots | Woebot, Tess, and eSMART-TH have been evaluated previously for depressive disorder, SABORI has been evaluated for psychological distress, and Tess has been evaluated for anxiety disorder. | Woebot and Tess are commercially available. |
aCOVID-19: coronavirus disease.