TY - JOUR
T1 - Using digital technology to reduce the prevalence of mental health disorders in populations
T2 - Time for a new approach
AU - Taylor, C. Barr
AU - Ruzek, Josef I.
AU - Fitzsimmons-Craft, Ellen E.
AU - Sadeh-Sharvit, Shiri
AU - Topooco, Naira
AU - Weissman, Ruth Striegel
AU - Eisenberg, Daniel
AU - Mohr, David
AU - Graham, Andrea
AU - Jacobi, Corinna
AU - Oldenburg, Brian
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by R01 MH100455, T32 HL007456, T32 HL130357, K01 DK116925, and K08 MH120341 from the National Institutes of Health, and Partnership Grant APP1057411, and Centre of Research Excellence APP1170937 from Australia’s National Health and Medical Research Council. The authors would like to acknowledge the help from Arielle Smith and Michelle Ferris in preparing the illustrations and manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 C Barr Taylor, Josef I Ruzek, Ellen E Fitzsimmons-Craft, Shiri Sadeh-Sharvit, Naira Topooco, Ruth Striegel Weissman, Daniel Eisenberg, David Mohr, Andrea Graham, Corinna Jacobi, Brian Oldenburg.
PY - 2020/7
Y1 - 2020/7
N2 - Digital technology, which includes the collection, analysis, and use of data from a variety of digital devices, has the potential to reduce the prevalence of disorders and improve mental health in populations. Among the many advantages of digital technology is that it allows preventive and clinical interventions, both of which are needed to reduce the prevalence of mental health disorders, to be feasibly integrated into health care and community delivery systems and delivered at scale. However, the use of digital technology also presents several challenges, including how systems can manage and implement interventions in a rapidly changing digital environment and handle critical issues that affect population-wide outcomes, including reaching the targeted population, obtaining meaningful levels of uptake and use of interventions, and achieving significant outcomes. We describe a possible solution, which is to have an outcome optimization team that focuses on the dynamic use of data to adapt interventions for populations, while at the same time, addressing the complex relationships among reach, uptake, use, and outcome. We use the example of eating disorders in young people to illustrate how this solution could be implemented at scale. We also discuss system, practitioner-related, and other issues related to the adaptation of such an approach. Digital technology has great potential for facilitating the reduction of mental illness rates in populations. However, achieving this goal will require the implementation of new approaches. As a solution, we argue for the need to create outcome optimization teams, tasked with integrating data from various sources and using advanced data analytics and new designs to develop interventions/strategies to increase reach, uptake, use/engagement, and outcomes for both preventive and treatment interventions.
AB - Digital technology, which includes the collection, analysis, and use of data from a variety of digital devices, has the potential to reduce the prevalence of disorders and improve mental health in populations. Among the many advantages of digital technology is that it allows preventive and clinical interventions, both of which are needed to reduce the prevalence of mental health disorders, to be feasibly integrated into health care and community delivery systems and delivered at scale. However, the use of digital technology also presents several challenges, including how systems can manage and implement interventions in a rapidly changing digital environment and handle critical issues that affect population-wide outcomes, including reaching the targeted population, obtaining meaningful levels of uptake and use of interventions, and achieving significant outcomes. We describe a possible solution, which is to have an outcome optimization team that focuses on the dynamic use of data to adapt interventions for populations, while at the same time, addressing the complex relationships among reach, uptake, use, and outcome. We use the example of eating disorders in young people to illustrate how this solution could be implemented at scale. We also discuss system, practitioner-related, and other issues related to the adaptation of such an approach. Digital technology has great potential for facilitating the reduction of mental illness rates in populations. However, achieving this goal will require the implementation of new approaches. As a solution, we argue for the need to create outcome optimization teams, tasked with integrating data from various sources and using advanced data analytics and new designs to develop interventions/strategies to increase reach, uptake, use/engagement, and outcomes for both preventive and treatment interventions.
KW - Internet
KW - Mental health, interventions
KW - Outcome
KW - Prevalence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85084004181&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2196/17493
DO - 10.2196/17493
M3 - Review article
C2 - 32706665
AN - SCOPUS:85084004181
SN - 1438-8871
VL - 22
JO - Journal of medical Internet research
JF - Journal of medical Internet research
IS - 7
M1 - e17493
ER -