Heinz Adrienne J, Wiltsey-Stirman Shannon, Jaworski Beth K, Sharin Theresa, Rhodes Lori, Steinmetz Sarah, Taylor Kathrine, Gorman Bernard, Mason Debbie, Marikos Sarah, McGovern Mark
Dissemination and Training Division, VA National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Health Care System.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University.
Psychol Serv. 2022;19(Suppl 2):67-79. doi: 10.1037/ser0000576. Epub 2021 Nov 15.
In October 2017, Northern California experienced devastating and historic wildfires leaving the community in need of support to foster emotional resilience during the recovery process. Adolescents represent a particularly vulnerable population in the wake of disaster, and digital mental health interventions may hold promise for reaching teens at scale. The present study examined the feasibility and efficacy of a mobile mental health app for disaster, Sonoma Rises. A multiple-baseline single-case experimental design (SCED) utilizing a research-enabled version of the app was employed with seven adolescents who experienced significant damage to their homes and schools in the wildfires. Participants completed daily mood ratings, weekly measures of posttraumatic stress symptoms, internalizing and externalizing symptoms, psychosocial functioning, and then pre-post-measures of anxiety, depression, wellbeing, sleep, academic engagement, and perceived social support as well as quantitative and qualitative measures of intervention satisfaction and feasibility. Sonoma Rises was found to be feasible in terms of engagement, satisfaction, and likelihood of recommending to a friend. During the study, another wildfire occurred and all participants underwent a prolonged mandated evacuation and were subject to a series of extended power outages. Uptake of the publicly available version of the Sonoma Rises app among the general population was modest but engagement among users was sustained. Lessons learned are offered to contribute to the science and practice of building, disseminating, and implementing digital tools to conduct more equitable disaster mental health outreach and research. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
2017年10月,北加利福尼亚州遭遇了毁灭性的历史性野火,社区在恢复过程中需要支持以增强情绪恢复力。青少年在灾难后是特别脆弱的群体,数字心理健康干预可能有望大规模惠及青少年。本研究考察了一款针对灾难的移动心理健康应用程序“索诺玛崛起”(Sonoma Rises)的可行性和有效性。对七名在野火中家庭和学校遭受重大破坏的青少年采用了多基线单病例实验设计(SCED),使用的是该应用程序的研究启用版本。参与者完成每日情绪评分、创伤后应激症状、内化和外化症状、心理社会功能的每周测量,然后进行焦虑、抑郁、幸福感、睡眠、学业参与度和感知社会支持的前后测量,以及干预满意度和可行性的定量和定性测量。结果发现,“索诺玛崛起”在参与度、满意度以及向朋友推荐的可能性方面是可行的。在研究期间,又发生了一场野火,所有参与者都经历了长时间的强制疏散,并遭遇了一系列长时间的停电。“索诺玛崛起”应用程序的公众可用版本在普通人群中的使用率不高,但用户的参与度得以维持。文中提供了经验教训,以促进构建、传播和实施数字工具的科学与实践,从而开展更公平的灾难心理健康推广和研究。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2022美国心理学会,保留所有权利)