MacPherson Megan, Bakker A Myfanwy, Anderson Koby, Holtzman Susan
School of Health and Exercise Sciences, University of British Columbia,Okanagan Campus; 3333 University Way, Kelowna, BC, V1V 1V, Canada.
Department of Psychology, Universiy of British Columbia, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.
Can J Pain. 2022 Jun 3;6(1):33-44. doi: 10.1080/24740527.2022.2030212. eCollection 2022.
With hundreds of pain management apps on the Canadian marketplace, it can be challenging for patients and clinicians to select effective and evidence-based mobile health (mHealth) apps that address pain from a biopsychosocial perspective.
The aim of this study is to identify pain management apps within the Canadian app marketplaces to aid clinicians in recommending apps.
The iOS and Android marketplaces were systematically searched to identify pain management apps that included at least one core component of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) or mindfulness- and acceptance-based therapies. Selected apps were assessed using a researcher developed psychological components checklist, and the Mobile App Rating Scale (MARS). These two measures provided a robust assessment of the apps' technical abilities and psychological principles being implemented.
Five hundred eight pain management apps were identified, yet only 12 included a psychological component and were available for evaluation. On average, apps contained 8.10 out of 18 psychological components (SD = 2.77) with a MARS quality rating of 4.02 out of 5 (SD = 0.32). The most common psychological components were grounded in CBT, including psychoeducation, sleep hygiene, behavioral activation, coping skills training, and social support. Among the least commonly included components were goal setting, values, and culture/diversity. Two-thirds of the apps involved health care practitioners in their development, but independent scientific review of apps was scarce.
The highest scoring apps (Curable, Pathways, Vivify) are highlighted for health care practitioners who may wish to recommend mHealth technologies to their patients for pain management. Future directions for research and app development are discussed.
加拿大市场上有数百款疼痛管理应用程序,患者和临床医生要选择从生物心理社会角度解决疼痛问题的有效且基于证据的移动健康(mHealth)应用程序可能具有挑战性。
本研究的目的是在加拿大应用程序市场中识别疼痛管理应用程序,以帮助临床医生推荐应用程序。
对iOS和安卓市场进行系统搜索,以识别包含认知行为疗法(CBT)或基于正念与接纳的疗法中至少一个核心组件的疼痛管理应用程序。使用研究人员开发的心理成分清单和移动应用程序评分量表(MARS)对选定的应用程序进行评估。这两项措施对应用程序所实施的技术能力和心理原则进行了有力评估。
共识别出508款疼痛管理应用程序,但只有12款包含心理成分且可供评估。平均而言,应用程序包含18个心理成分中的8.10个(标准差=2.77),MARS质量评分为5分中的4.02分(标准差=0.32)。最常见的心理成分基于CBT,包括心理教育、睡眠卫生、行为激活、应对技能训练和社会支持。最不常包含的成分包括目标设定、价值观以及文化/多样性。三分之二的应用程序在开发过程中有医疗保健从业者参与,但对应用程序的独立科学审查很少。
为可能希望向患者推荐mHealth技术进行疼痛管理的医疗保健从业者重点介绍了得分最高的应用程序(Curable、Pathways、Vivify)。讨论了研究和应用程序开发的未来方向。