Friday 31 January 2020

From Digital Mental Health Interventions to Digital “Addiction”: Where the Two Fields Converge

an article by Elias Aboujaoude (Stanford University School of Medicine, CA, USA) and Lina Gega (Hull York Medical School, University of York, UK) published in frontiers in Psychiatry

Abstract

Scientific literature from the last two decades indicates that, when it comes to mental health, technology is presented either as panacea or anathema. This is partly because researchers, too frequently, have planted themselves either in the field of digital mental health interventions (variably called “telepsychiatry”, “digital therapeutics”, “computerized therapy”, etc.), or in that of the problems arising from technology, with little cross-fertilisation between the two.

Yet, a closer look at the two fields reveals unifying themes that underpin both the advantages and dangers of technology in mental health. This article discusses five such themes.

First, the breakneck pace of technology evolution keeps digital mental health interventions updated and creates more potentially problematic activities, leaving researchers perennially behind, so new technologies become outdated by the time they are studied.

Second, the freedom of creating and using technologies in a regulatory vacuum has led to proliferation and choice, but also to a Wild-West online environment.

Third, technology is an open window to access information, but also to compromise privacy, with serious implications for online psychology and digital mental health interventions.

Fourth, weak bonds characterise online interactions, including those between therapists and patients, contributing to high attrition from digital interventions.

Finally, economic analyses of technology-enabled care may show good value for money, but often fail to capture the true costs of technology, a fact that is mirrored in other online activities.

The article ends with a call for collaborations between two interrelated fields that have been – until now – mutually insular.

Full text (HTML) [contains a link to downloadable PDF]

Labels:
digital_mental_health_interventions, digital_addiction,


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