| Literature DB >> 35240931 |
Dominika Kwasnicka1,2, Jan Keller3, Olga Perski4, Sebastian Potthoff5, Gill A Ten Hoor6, Ben Ainsworth7, Rik Crutzen8, Simone Dohle9, Anne van Dongen10, Matti Heino11, Julia F Henrich12, Liam Knox13, Laura M König14, Wendy Maltinsky15, Claire McCallum16, Judith Nalukwago17, Efrat Neter18, Johanna Nurmi11,19, Manuel Spitschan20, Samantha B Van Beurden21, L Nynke Van der Laan22, Kathrin Wunsch23, Jasper J J Levink24, Robbert Sanderman10,25.
Abstract
In this White Paper, we outline recommendations from the perspective of health psychology and behavioural science, addressing three research gaps: (1) What methods in the health psychology research toolkit can be best used for developing and evaluating digital health tools? (2) What are the most feasible strategies to reuse digital health tools across populations and settings? (3) What are the main advantages and challenges of sharing (openly publishing) data, code, intervention content and design features of digital health tools? We provide actionable suggestions for researchers joining the continuously growing Open Digital Health movement, poised to revolutionise health psychology research and practice in the coming years. This White Paper is positioned in the current context of the COVID-19 pandemic, exploring how digital health tools have rapidly gained popularity in 2020-2022, when world-wide health promotion and treatment efforts rapidly shifted from face-to-face to remote delivery. This statement is written by the Directors of the not-for-profit Open Digital Health initiative (n = 6), Experts attending the European Health Psychology Society Synergy Expert Meeting (n = 17), and the initiative consultant, following a two-day meeting (19-20th August 2021).Entities:
Keywords: Open Digital Health; healthcare; mHealth; open science; technology; treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35240931 DOI: 10.1080/17437199.2022.2046482
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Psychol Rev ISSN: 1743-7199