Buck Benjamin, Nguyen Janelle, Porter Shelan, Ben-Zeev Dror, Reger Greg M
Behavioral Research in Technology and Engineering (BRiTE) Center, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States.
VA Puget Sound Healthcare System, Seattle, WA, United States.
JMIR Ment Health. 2022 Jan 28;9(1):e26049. doi: 10.2196/26049.
Veterans with serious mental illnesses (SMIs) face barriers to accessing in-person evidence-based interventions that improve illness management. Mobile health (mHealth) has been demonstrated to be feasible, acceptable, effective, and engaging among individuals with SMIs in community mental health settings. mHealth for SMIs has not been tested within the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
This study examines the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of an mHealth intervention for SMI in the context of VA outpatient care.
A total of 17 veterans with SMIs were enrolled in a 1-month pilot trial of FOCUS, a smartphone-based self-management intervention for SMI. At baseline and posttest, they completed measures examining symptoms and functional recovery. The participants provided qualitative feedback related to the usability and acceptability of the intervention.
Veterans completed on an average of 85.0 (SD 96.1) interactions with FOCUS over the 1-month intervention period. They reported high satisfaction, usability, and acceptability, with nearly all participants (16/17, 94%) reporting that they would recommend the intervention to a fellow veteran. Clinicians consistently reported finding mHealth-related updates useful for informing their care. Qualitative feedback indicated that veterans thought mHealth complemented their existing VA services well and described potential opportunities to adapt FOCUS to specific subpopulations (eg, combat veterans) as well as specific delivery modalities (eg, groups). In the 1-month period, the participants experienced small improvements in self-assessed recovery, auditory hallucinations, and quality of life.
The FOCUS mHealth intervention is feasible, acceptable, and usable among veterans. Future work should develop and examine VA-specific implementation approaches of FOCUS for this population.
患有严重精神疾病(SMI)的退伍军人在获得改善疾病管理的面对面循证干预措施方面面临障碍。移动健康(mHealth)已被证明在社区心理健康环境中,对于患有SMI的个体是可行的、可接受的、有效的且具有吸引力的。针对患有SMI的退伍军人的移动健康干预措施尚未在美国退伍军人事务部(VA)内部进行测试。
本研究在VA门诊护理背景下,检验针对SMI的移动健康干预措施的可行性、可接受性和初步有效性。
共有17名患有SMI的退伍军人参加了为期1个月的FOCUS试点试验,FOCUS是一种基于智能手机的针对SMI的自我管理干预措施。在基线和测试后,他们完成了检查症状和功能恢复的测量。参与者提供了与干预措施的可用性和可接受性相关的定性反馈。
在为期1个月的干预期内,退伍军人与FOCUS平均完成了85.0(标准差96.1)次互动。他们报告了高度的满意度、可用性和可接受性,几乎所有参与者(16/17,94%)表示会向其他退伍军人推荐该干预措施。临床医生一致报告称,发现与移动健康相关的更新对指导他们的护理很有用。定性反馈表明,退伍军人认为移动健康很好地补充了他们现有的VA服务,并描述了将FOCUS应用于特定亚群体(如参战退伍军人)以及特定交付方式(如团体)的潜在机会。在这1个月期间,参与者在自我评估的恢复、幻听和生活质量方面有小幅改善。
FOCUS移动健康干预措施在退伍军人中是可行的、可接受的且可用的。未来的工作应针对这一人群开发并检验FOCUS在VA的具体实施方法。