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Toward Understanding Drivers of Patient Engagement With Digital Mental Health Interventions - Part II

Recruiting
18 - 75 years of age
Both
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study is a clinical trial that evaluates what drives patient engagement and tests the impact of two strategies-automated motivational push messaging and coach support-to improve engagement with an evidence-based mobile app intervention for depression and/or anxiety.

Description

This 8-week, clinical trial involves primary care patients with clinically significant depression and/or anxiety recruited via provider referral. Participants will received access to a digital mental health intervention with known efficacy and be randomized to an engagement strategy condition--a previously-validated Coach Support protocol (CS), a newly-developed automated motivational messaging protocol (AMM), both or neither. To further understand how messages in the AMM arms function, message delivery will be micro-randomized: each day participants will be randomized to receive a message or not, such that they receive an average of 4.2 messages/week. Micro-randomization allows causal inference about the near-term impact of message delivery (i.e., are AMMs a cue to action) and the relationship between message impact and context (e.g., day in study). Measured outcome data will include level of engagement (operationalized as minutes of intervention use) and weekly self-reports of clinical outcomes.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Mass General Brigham primary care patient
  • Age 18-75
  • Clinically significant symptoms of depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) greater than or equal to 10) and/or anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7) greater than or equal to 8)
  • Owns a smartphone capable of running the study applications
  • Fluent in English.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Diagnosis of bipolar I or bipolar II disorder per patient report or the patient's medical record
  • Diagnosis of any psychotic disorder per patient report or the patient's medical record
  • Current substance use disorder per patient report or the patient's medical record
  • Acute and/or unstable medical problem that may interfere with participation (e.g., scheduled for surgery in the next two months).

Study details

Depression, Anxiety Disorders

NCT05555875

Brigham and Women's Hospital

14 June 2024

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