| Literature DB >> 35394434 |
Emily E Bernstein1,2, Hilary Weingarden1,2, Emma C Wolfe1, Margaret D Hall1, Ivar Snorrason1,2, Sabine Wilhelm1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Smartphone app-based therapies offer clear promise for reducing the gap in available mental health care for people at risk for or people with mental illness. To this end, as smartphone ownership has become widespread, app-based therapies have become increasingly common. However, the research on app-based therapies is lagging behind. In particular, although experts suggest that human support may be critical for increasing engagement and effectiveness, we have little systematic knowledge about the role that human support plays in app-based therapy. It is critical to address these open questions to optimally design and scale these interventions.Entities:
Keywords: coaching; cognitive behavioral therapy; digital health; emotional disorder; guided; mental health; mobile app; mobile phone
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35394434 PMCID: PMC9034419 DOI: 10.2196/33307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 7.076
Figure 1Flowchart of literature search. Reasons for exclusion: (1) primary aim or target is not an emotional disorder or concern, (2) intervention is not based on cognitive behavioral therapy or skills, (3) treatment is not delivered at least in part via smartphone app outside of an in-person session, (4) treatment does not include human involvement, and (5) published protocol or preliminary report is excluded given subsequent publication of outcomes paper.
Apps and their availability.
| App (or suite of apps) namea | Trials, nb | Citation | Still activec | Commercially availablec |
| ¡Aptívate! (Behavioral Activation Tech, LLC) | 1 | Dahne et al, 2019 [ | Yes | Yes |
| Agoraphobia Free (Health eLiving Partnership Ltd) | 1 | Christoforou et al, 2017 [ | No | No |
| Anxiety Coach (Mayo Clinic) | 2 | Whiteside et al, 2014 [ | No (on the web only) | No |
| Ascend (Meru Health) | 3 | Goldin et al, 2019 [ | No | No |
| AWAKE | 1 | Berg et al, 2020 [ | No | No |
| Behavioral Apptivation (Behavioral Activation Tech, LLC) | 1 | Dahne et al, 2018 [ | Yes | No |
| BiP OCD (Stockholms läns landsting) | 1 | Lenhard et al, 2017 [ | No | No |
| Boost Me (Voyage42) | 1 | Stiles-Shield et al, 2019 [ | Yes | Yes |
| CBT Mobile-Work | 1 | Callan et al, 2021 [ | No | No |
| CONEMO (The Latin America Treatment & Innovation Network in Mental Health) | 1 | Menezes et al, 2019 [ | No | No |
| DCombat | 1 | Giosan et al, 2017 [ | No | No |
| eQuoo (PsycApps Ltd) | 1 | Litvin et al, 2020 [ | Yes | Yes |
| EVO (Akili Interactive Labs) | 1 | Arean et al, 2016 [ | Yes | Yes |
| Get Happy Program (Developers of the Sadness Program) | 1 | Watts et al, 2013 [ | Yes | No |
| GET.ON | 2 | Ebenfeld et al, 2020 [ | No | No |
| Happy (independent programmers; specific developers not stated in paper) | 1 | Otero et al, 2020 [ | Unclear | Unclear |
| HARUToday (Inha Intelligent Mobile Computing Lab) | 1 | Ham et al, 2019 [ | Yes | Yes (as Haru: ASD) |
| Helpath (CICESE-UT3) | 1 | Martínez-Miranda et al, 2019 [ | Yes | Yes (Google Play only) |
| iCanThrive (UVA Apps, LLC) | 1 | Chow et al, 2020 [ | Yes | Yes (Google Play only) |
| IntelliCare (suite; Adaptive Health) | 5 | Chen et al, 2019 [ | Yes | Yes |
| iPST | 1 | Arean et al, 2016 [ | No | No |
| Journey to the West (The App Happy Project) | 1 | Lee et al, 2014 [ | Yes | Yes |
| Kokoro (Flatt Steering Committee) | 2 | Mantani et al, 2017 [ | No | No |
| Lantern (Thrive Network, Inc) | 2 | Newman et al, 2021 [ | No | No |
| Meru Health Program (Meru Health) | 1 | Raevuori et al, 2021 [ | Yes | Yes |
| MindClimb (Optio Publishing Inc) | 1 | Newton et al, 2020 [ | Yes | Yes (Google Play only) |
| mindLAMP (Division of Digital Psychiatry) | 1 | Rauseo-Ricupero and Torous, 2021 [ | Yes | Yes |
| Monsenso (Monsenso A/S CVR 35517391) | 1 | Tønning et al, 2021 [ | Yes | Yes |
| nOCD (nOCD Inc) | 1 | Gershkovich et al, 2021 [ | Yes | Yes |
| Pacifica (now Sanvello; Sanvello Health) | 1 | Broglia et al, 2019 [ | Yes | Yes |
| Perspectives BDD (Koa Health) | 1 | Wilhelm et al, 2020 [ | Yes | No |
| PsychAssist | 1 | Clough et al, 2015 [ | No | No |
| PTSD Coach (US Department of Veterans Affairs) | 3 | Pacella-LaBarbara et al, 2020 [ | Yes | Yes |
| RAW HAND | 1 | Hong et al, 2018 [ | No | No |
| Run4Love (WeChat-based) | 1 | Guo et al, 2020 [ | Yes | No |
| SmartCAT (University of Pittsburgh) | 2 | Silk et al, 2020 [ | Yes | Yes |
| SPARX (University of Auckland) | 1 | Werner-Seidler et al, 2020 [ | Yes | Yes |
| Step-by-Step (World Health Organization) | 1 | Liem et al, 2020 [ | Unclear | No |
| Stress Free (Thrive Therapeutic Software) | 1 | Christoforou et al, 2017 [ | No | No |
| StressProffen (Oslo Universitetssykehus HF) | 1 | Børøsund et al, 2018 [ | Yes | Yes |
| StudiCare Stress (Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy Work Unit) | 1 | Harrer et al, 2018 [ | No | No |
| Thought Challenger (part of the IntelliCare suite; Adaptive Health, Inc) | 1 | Stiles-Shields et al, 2019 [ | Yes | Yes |
| VA apps (suite; US Department of Veterans Affairs) | 1 | Roy et al, 2017 [ | Yes | Yes |
| Vida Health | 1 | Venkatesan et al, 2020 [ | Yes | Yes |
| No name provided | 10 | Dagöö et al, 2014 [ | —d | — |
aDeveloper included in parentheses where available.
bThe numbers of trials do not add up to 64, as some articles reported on multiple apps.
cData as of March 23, 2022.
dNot available.
Coach characteristics (N=64).a
| Characteristics | Value, n (%) | |
|
| ||
|
| Undergraduate student or above | 1 (2) |
|
| Bachelor’s degree or above | 17 (27) |
|
| Graduate student or above | 7 (11) |
|
| Master’s level or above | 17 (27) |
|
| Doctoral level | 10 (16) |
|
| Not specified | 12 (19) |
|
| ||
|
| Prior professional experience required (ie, no study-specific training) | 13 (20) |
|
| Prior professional experience required with ongoing supervision (ie, no study-specific training) | 2 (3) |
|
| Study-specific training (ie, coaches received a manual or underwent a seminar, workshop, or other formal instruction) | 18 (28) |
|
| Study-specific training with ongoing supervision | 16 (25) |
|
| Supervision (ie, no study-specific training or prior experience specified) | 2 (3) |
|
| Not specified | 13 (20) |
aCounts reflect data included in the published articles and provided via email correspondence. Regarding coach qualifications, articles are grouped by the minimum training required for eligible coaches. For example, a trial using bachelor’s level coaches as well as first-year graduate students would be classified as bachelor’s degree or above.
Figure 2Coaching communication patterns. Counts reflect data included in the published studies and provided via email correspondence.
Summary of studies analyzing the role of coaching in treatment engagement and outcomes.
| Citation | Analysis | Finding | Sample | Treatment | App | Coacha | Communicationb |
| Ebenfeld et al, 2021 [ | Qualitative | Insufficient coaching as reason for dropout | 92 adults, diagnosed panic disorder, majority women, White, mean age 38 (SD 10.4) years | CBTc for panic | GET.ON | Bachelor’s level | Weekly messages |
| Goldin et al, 2019 [ | Qualitative | Positive regard for coaching | 2 studies, 22 and 95 adults, at least mild depressive symptoms, majority women, White, mean age 23.2 (SD 1.1) and 32 (SD 9.9) years | MBSRd and MCBTe exercises for depression | Ascend | Master’s level | Messaging or phone calls 2-3 times per week |
| Ly et al, 2015 [ | Qualitative | Positive regard for coaching | 12 adult, diagnosed with MDDf, 50% (6/12) women, mean age 38 (SD 14) years | BAg for depression | Not reported | Graduate students | At least weekly messaging |
| Menezes et al, 2019 [ | Qualitative | Positive regard for coaching | 66 adults, at least moderate depressive symptoms and comorbid hypertension or diabetes, majority women, aged 41-60 years | BA for depression | CONEMO | Nurse or nurse assistant | Weekly in-person meetings or phone calls |
| Tiet et al, 2019 [ | Qualitative | Positive regard for coaching | 29 adults, probable PTSDh diagnosis, majority men, White, median age 61 years | CBT skills for PTSD symptoms | PTSD Coach | Paraprofessional | Phone calls every other week |
| Berg et al, 2020 [ | Qualitative and outcomes | Positive regard for coaching; mixed effects for outcomes | 38 adults, cancer survivors, majority women, White, mean age 32 (SD 5.5) years | CBT for general mental health | AWAKE | Master’s level | Weekly phone calls; twice-weekly texts |
| Mohr et al, 2019 [ | Engagement and outcomes | Mixed effects for engagement; mixed effects for outcomes | 301 adults, at least moderate depressive symptoms or mild to moderate general anxiety symptoms, majority women, White, mean age 37 (SD 12) years | CBT skills for transdiagnostic depression or anxiety | IntelliCare (suite) | Bachelor’s level | Initial call; optional midtreatment call; 2-3 messages per week |
| Roy et al, 2017 [ | Engagement and outcomes | Positive effects for engagement; slower symptom change | 144 adults, subthreshold PTSD symptoms, majority men, White, mean age 33 (SD 11) years | CBT skills for PTSD symptoms | VA apps (suite) | Doctoral level | Introductory meeting; daily messages |
| Venkatesan et al, 2020 [ | Engagement and outcomes | Positive effects for engagement; mixed effects for outcomes | 323 adults, mild to moderate depressive or general anxiety symptoms, majority women, mean age 36 (SD 9) years | CBT skills for transdiagnostic depression or anxiety | Vida Health | Master’s level | Weekly phone calls; messaging as needed |
| Chen et al, 2019 [ | Engagement | No effects for engagement | 98 adults | CBT skills for transdiagnostic depression and anxiety | IntelliCare (suite) | Bachelor’s level | Initial call; 2 messages per week |
| Stiles-Shields et al, 2019 [ | Engagement | No effects for engagement | 30 adults, at least moderate depressive symptoms | BA or cognitive restructuring for depression | Boost Me; Thought Challenger | Master’s level | Weekly phone calls or emails |
| Graham et al, 2020 [ | Outcomes | No effects for outcomes | 146 adults, at least moderate depressive or mild to moderate GADi symptoms, majority women, White, mean age 42 (SD 13.8) years | CBT skills for transdiagnostic depression or anxiety | IntelliCare (suite) | Bachelor’s level | Initial call; optional midtreatment call; 2 messages per week |
| Newman et al, 2021 [ | Outcomes | No effects for outcomes | 100 college students, self-reported GAD, majority women, White, mean age 21 years | CBT for anxiety | Lantern | Bachelor’s level | Phone calls or messaging as needed |
| Possemato et al, 2016 [ | Outcomes | Positive effects for outcomes | 20 veterans, likely PTSD diagnosis, majority men, mean age 42 (SD 12) years | CBT skills for PTSD symptoms | PTSD Coach | Master’s level | In-person meetings or phone calls every other week |
aCoach: minimum required degree or qualification to be in the supportive human role.
bFrequency and method of coach contact.
cCBT: cognitive behavioral therapy.
dMBSR: mindfulness-based stress reduction.
eMCBT: mindfulness-based cognitive behavioral therapy.
fMDD: major depressive disorder.
gBA: behavioral activation.
hPTSD: posttraumatic stress disorder.
iGAD: generalized anxiety disorder.
Proportions of missing data over time.a
| Dimension | 2012 (n=1), n (%) | 2013 (n=1), n (%) | 2014 (n=5), n (%) | 2015 (n=3), n (%) | 2016 (n=3), n (%) | 2017 (n=6), n (%) | 2018 (n=7), n (%) | 2019 (n=16), n (%) | 2020 (n=17), n (%) | 2021 (n=5), n (%) | Total (N=64), n (%) |
| Qualifications | 1 (100) | 1 (100) | 2 (40) | 0 (0) | 1 (33) | 3 (50) | 3 (43) | 4 (25) | 5 (29) | 0 (0) | 20 (31) |
| Type of training | 1 (100) | 1 (100) | 2 (40) | 1 (33) | 1 (33) | 4 (67) | 2 (29) | 4 (25) | 4 (24) | 1 (20) | 21 (33) |
| Frequency | 1 (100) | 1 (100) | 2 (40) | 0 (0) | 1 (33) | 1 (17) | 2 (29) | 3 (19) | 7 (41) | 1 (20) | 19 (30) |
| Duration | 1 (100) | 0 (0) | 3 (60) | 2 (67) | 2 (67) | 1 (17) | 5 (71) | 10 (63) | 12 (71) | 4 (80) | 40 (63) |
| Method | 1 (100) | 0 (0) | 2 (40) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (6) | 2 (12) | 0 (0) | 6 (9) |
| Selection | 1 (100) | 0 (0) | 2 (40) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (6) | 1 (6) | 0 (0) | 5 (8) |
| Initiation | 1 (100) | 0 (0) | 1 (20) | 1 (33) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (14) | 1 (6) | 2 (12) | 0 (0) | 7 (11) |
| Content | 1 (100) | 0 (0) | 1 (20) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (14) | 1 (6) | 2 (12) | 2 (40) | 8 (13) |
aValues reflect the proportion of studies in a given year that did not report a given facet of their coaching protocol or results. For example, 40% (2/5) of the published studies from 2014 did not describe the qualifications of their coaches in the text.