TOPLINE:
Smartphone apps, including those using cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and mindfulness techniques, showed comparable efficacy in reducing depression, anxiety, and suicidality in patients with psychiatric conditions waiting for appointments with psychiatrists or therapists.
METHODOLOGY:
- Participants were adults aged 18 years or older seeking outpatient psychiatric services from several mental and behavioral health clinics within the University of Michigan Health System.
- Eligible participants were those with either a scheduled future mental health appointment or an initial appointment completed within the past 60 days and daily access to a smartphone.
- After completing a baseline survey that gathered data on participants’ depression, anxiety, and suicidality scores, 2080 participants were randomly assigned to one of five groups:
- Enhanced personalized feedback (EPF) only (n = 690)
- SilverCloud only (SilverCloud, a mobile application designed to deliver CBT strategies; n = 345)
- SilverCloud plus EPF (n = 346)
- Headspace only (Headspace, a mobile application designed to train users in mindfulness practices; n = 349)
- Headspace plus EPF (n = 349)
TAKEAWAY:
- The mean baseline Patient Health Questionnaire-9 depression score was 12.7 (6.4% patients). Overall, depression scores significantly decreased by 2.5 points from baseline to the 6-week follow-up for all five arms, with marginal mean differences in mean change ranging from −2.1 to −2.9 (P < .001).
- The magnitude of change was not significantly different across the five arms on most measures (P = .31). Additionally, the groups did not differ in decrease of anxiety or substance use symptoms.
- The Headspace arms reported significantly greater improvements on a suicidality measure subscale than the SilverCloud arms (mean difference in mean change, 0.63; P = .004).
IN PRACTICE:
“Having this type of option, especially for people who are motivated enough to seek an appointment and wait for it, could be very valuable when providers have long wait lists,” lead author Adam Horwitz, PhD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, said in a press release.
“These individuals want to be doing something about their mental health but don’t yet have access, so this suggests that providing them with some sort of digital option when their motivation is already high, and they are ready to do something, could begin to make a difference.”
SOURCE:
Dr. Horwitz led the study, which was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
There may have been aspects of formal or in-person care that contributed to the improvement in symptoms across groups and diluted the ability to identify differences between applications in effects on symptom reduction.
DISCLOSURES:
This study was funded by a grant from Precision Health, the Eisenberg Family Depression Center, and the National Institute of Mental Health. Disclosures are noted in the original article.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.