| Literature DB >> 32955451 |
Samantha L Bernecker1, Joseph Jay Williams2, Norian A Caporale-Berkowitz3, Akash R Wasil4, Michael J Constantino5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Millions of people worldwide are underserved by the mental health care system. Indeed, most mental health problems go untreated, often because of resource constraints (eg, limited provider availability and cost) or lack of interest or faith in professional help. Furthermore, subclinical symptoms and chronic stress in the absence of a mental illness diagnosis often go unaddressed, despite their substantial health impact. Innovative and scalable treatment delivery methods are needed to supplement traditional therapies to fill these gaps in the mental health care system.Entities:
Keywords: computer-assisted instruction; eHealth; educational technology; internet; mental health; nonprofessional education; online learning; psychological stress; social support
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32955451 PMCID: PMC7536598 DOI: 10.2196/17164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Study flow diagram. N denotes the total number of individuals, not the number of dyads. BSI: Brief Symptom Inventory.
Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics.
| Characteristics | Values | |
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| Mean (SD) | 24.6 (12.4) |
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| Median | 20.5 |
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| Woman | 42 (70) |
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| Man | 15 (25) |
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| Transman | 2 (3) |
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| Genderqueer woman | 1 (2) |
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| White non-Hispanic or Latinx | 35 (58) |
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| East Asian | 10 (17) |
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| White Hispanic or Latinx | 5 (8) |
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| South Asian | 4 (7) |
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| Black | 2 (3) |
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| Native American, Hispanic or Latinx | 1 (2) |
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| Multiracial | 3 (5) |
| Born outside the United States (n=60), n (%) | 13 (22) | |
| Nonnative English speakers (n=60), n (%) | 8 (13) | |
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| Some college education | 41 (68) |
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| Associate’s or technical degree | 1 (2) |
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| Bachelor’s degree | 9 (15) |
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| Some graduate or professional school | 3 (5) |
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| Graduate or professional degree | 6 (10) |
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| Never married | 51 (85) |
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| Married | 7 (12) |
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| Separated or divorced | 2 (3) |
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| Mean (SD) | 96,000 (86,000) |
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| Median | 80,000 |
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| Mean (SD) | 54,000 (43,000) |
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| Median | 42,000 |
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| Mean (SD) | 60.8 (9.3) |
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| Median | 61.5 |
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| Mean (SD) | 18.7 (5.8) |
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| Median | 18 |
| Ever in psychotherapy (n=60), n (%) | 19 (32) | |
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| Mean (SD) | 25.8 (31.7) |
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| Median | 10 |
| Would consider psychotherapy (n=60), n (%) | 52 (87) | |
| Ever on psychiatric medication (n=60), n (%) | 11 (18) | |
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| Mean (SD) | 41.0 (52.4) |
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| Median | 18 |
| Currently on psychiatric medication (n=60), n (%) | 9 (15) | |
| Would consider psychiatric medication (n=60), n (%) | 44 (73) | |
aIncome/√ household members is included to adjust total income for household size while accounting for economies of scale.
bIn psychometrics, the T score refers to a normatively adjusted score with a mean of 50 and an SD of 10 (not to be confused with the t test statistic).
cRefers to total months of treatment over the course of the lifetime; these months were not necessarily one contiguous course of treatment.
Descriptive statistics for outcome variables by visit and condition.
| Outcome variable | Visit 1a, mean (SD) | Visit 2b, mean (SD) | Visit 3c, mean (SD) | |
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| Immediate training condition | 239.3 (103.0) | 112.6 (62.1) | —d |
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| Delayed training condition | 252.9 (113.6) | 241.5 (77.7) | 88.9 (64.2) |
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| Immediate training condition | 3.0 (3.9) | 27.9 (25.8) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 3.5 (3.2) | 2.2 (4.0) | 21.9 (17.4) |
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| Immediate training condition | 30.7 (17.6) | 4.8 (6.8) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 40.5 (21.3) | 39.7 (17.0) | 12.4 (18.2) |
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| Immediate training condition | 2.9 (2.1) | 6.1 (6.4) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 2.1 (2.4) | 3.7 (3.8) | 12.7 (7.7) |
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| Immediate training condition | 16.1 (9.6) | 13.9 (10.5) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 9.1 (6.1) | 10.9 (7.0) | 18.1 (13.1) |
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| Immediate training condition | 16.6 (13.3) | 3.5 (8.2) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 18.3 (13.1) | 19.0 (14.9) | 5.2 (9.6) |
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| Immediate training condition | 16.1 (12.1) | 15.3 (14.3) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 13.4 (11.5) | 12 (9.2) | 8.1 (7.7) |
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| Immediate training condition | 45.4 (11.8) | 33.4 (20.1) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 53.5 (17) | 52.3 (17.7) | 34.1 (17.9) |
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| Immediate training condition | −17.8 (6.7) | 4.1 (8.3) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | −21.3 (8.3) | −22.8 (6.5) | 0.9 (12.0) |
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| Immediate training condition | 5.4 (1.5) | 7.0 (1.5) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 5.4 (1.5) | 5.4 (1.5) | 7.0 (1.6) |
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| Immediate training condition | 7.0 (1.4) | 7.1 (1.8) | — |
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| Delayed training condition | 6.6 (1.6) | 6.6 (1.6) | 7.2 (1.9) |
an=60 at visit 1.
bn=22 for immediate training and n=28 for delayed training at visit 2.
cn=20 at visit 3 (delayed training condition only).
dCells for the immediate training group are blank for visit 3 because the immediate training group only participated in two laboratory visits (see “Study Design” section).
eCSRS: Crowdsourcing Mental Health Session Reaction Scale.
Results of Bayesian multilevel models estimating change from pretraining to posttraining among all participants (model 1) and the difference between the 2 conditions in change from the first to second laboratory visits (model 2).
| Outcome variable | Pre-post training effect (model 1), estimatea | Pre-post training effect (model 1), 95% CIb | Visit×condition interaction (model 2), estimate | Visit×condition interaction (model 2), 95% CI | |
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| Total sentence units utteredc | −1.88 | −2.21 to −1.54 | −1.97 | −2.47 to −1.46 | |
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| Restatement | 16.44 | 7.92 to 34.81 | 28.50 | 6.89 to 119.1 |
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| Influencing | 0.09 | 0.04 to 0.16 | 0.14 | 0.07 to 0.28 |
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| Open-ended questions | 3.63 | 2.46 to 5.42 | 1.40 | 0.59 to 3.22 |
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| Closed-ended questions | 1.15 | 0.84 to 1.55 | 0.63 | 0.36 to 1.07 |
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| Self-disclosure | 0.05 | 0.01 to 0.16 | 0.09 | 0.03 to 0.25 |
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| Sympathy | 0.86 | 0.59 to 1.23 | 1.08 | 0.59 to 1.95 |
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| Other | 0.51 | 0.36 to 0.71 | 0.64 | 0.36 to 1.13 |
| Adherence scoree | 1.64 | 1.39 to 1.9 | 1.90 | 1.48 to 2.32 | |
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| CSRSf task reactions | 0.96 | 0.69 to 1.26 | 1.00 | 0.41 to 1.56 |
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| CSRS relationship reactions | 0.28 | −0.06 to 0.62 | 0.20 | −0.38 to 0.77 |
aEstimate: mean of estimated posterior distribution.
b95% CI: 95% credibility interval.
cCount variable with Poisson link function; coefficients are in log units.
dBinomial or Bernoulli distributed variables with logistic link function; coefficients are in odds ratio units. For model 1, the estimate represents the relative odds of the behavior at posttraining compared with pretraining; for model 2, the estimate represents the degree to which the relative odds of a behavior at visit 2 compared with visit 1 were higher or lower in the group that underwent immediate training.
eMetric variables with identity link function; coefficients are in standardized units (ie, SDs).
fCSRS: Crowdsourcing Mental Health Session Reaction Scale.