A Systematic Review of The Effectiveness, Content, and Usage Patterns of Mobile Mental Health Interventions on Smartphone Platforms for Anxiety Symptoms
Citation
TURAN, Numan & Şeyda ÇETİNTAŞ. "A Systematic Review of The Effectiveness, Content, and Usage Patterns of Mobile Mental Health Interventions on Smartphone Platforms for Anxiety Symptoms". Journal of Evidence-Based Psychotherapies, 21.2 (2021): 61-80.Abstract
This systematic review aims to examine the content, usage pattern and
efficacy of mobile mental health interventions in reducing anxiety
symptoms. A search of 10 electronic databases returned 44 408 studies in
total and 27 studies met the inclusion criteria, including 4460 participants in
total. The rate of attrition was 27% (SD = 22) among the participants who
initiated the app use. The rate of significant reductions in measures of anxiety
symptoms was 87% from within-subjects pretest to posttest assessments, yet
this rate dropped to 46% when compared to a waitlist/control group. A vast
majority of the studies used cognitive and/or behavioral interventions (N =
26, 96%), a few studies included professional support (N = 11, 41%), a
structured form of delivering the interventions (N = 8, 30%) or tailored it to
users’ needs (N = 6, 22%). Few studies reported the actual time spent on the
app per week (N = 4, M = 63.76, SD = 62.17). The mobile mental health
interventions were effective in reducing anxiety symptoms, yet this
effectiveness eroded compared to control groups. There is a need to develop
consistent ways of reporting the usage patterns and testing evidence-based
interventions other than cognitive behavioral treatments.