Bautista Justine, Schueller Stephen M
School of Social Ecology, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States.
Department of Psychological Science, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States.
JMIR Ment Health. 2023 Mar 22;10:e43942. doi: 10.2196/43942.
Increasing rates of mental health diagnoses in college students signal the need for new opportunities to support the mental health of this population. With many mental health apps being efficacious, they may be a promising resource for college campuses to provide support to their students. However, it is important to understand why (or why not) students might want to use apps and their desired features.
Information on students' interest in mental health apps may inform which apps are to be provided and how campuses can support their use. This study aimed to understand the interest and hesitation in app use and the relationship between mental health needs, as defined by depression, anxiety, and positive mental health, and app use.
The web-based Healthy Minds Study collected information on mental health needs, perceptions, and service use across colleges and universities. We used a sample of 989 participants who completed the survey between 2018 and 2020 and an elective module on digital mental health. We analyzed the elective module responses using a mixed methods approach, including both descriptive and inferential statistics, along with thematic coding for open text responses.
The Results from this study revealed that anxiety (b=-0.07; P<.001), but not depression (b=0.03; P=.12) and positive mental health (b=-0.02; P=.17), was a significant predictor of app adoption. Prominent qualitative findings indicated that the most desired app features included tips and advice, access to resources and information, and on-demand support that involves interaction throughout the day. The participants also suggested an overall desire for human interaction to be integrated into an app. As predicted, hesitancy was encountered, and the qualitative results suggested that there was a lack of interest in the adoption of mental health app and preference.
The findings from this study underscore that simply providing digital mental health apps as tools may be insufficient to support their use in college campuses. Although many students were open to using a mental health app, hesitation and uncertainty were common in the participant responses. Working with colleges and universities to increase digital literacy and provide resources that allow students to gauge when app use is appropriate may be helpful when implementing mental health apps as resources in college campuses.
大学生心理健康诊断率不断上升,这表明需要有新的机会来支持这一群体的心理健康。由于许多心理健康应用程序都很有效,它们可能是大学校园为学生提供支持的一个有前景的资源。然而,了解学生使用(或不使用)应用程序的原因以及他们期望的功能非常重要。
了解学生对心理健康应用程序的兴趣,这可能有助于确定应提供哪些应用程序以及校园如何支持其使用。本研究旨在了解学生对应用程序使用的兴趣和犹豫态度,以及由抑郁、焦虑和积极心理健康所定义的心理健康需求与应用程序使用之间的关系。
基于网络的“健康心灵研究”收集了各高校学生心理健康需求、认知和服务使用情况的信息。我们使用了989名参与者的样本,他们在2018年至2020年期间完成了调查以及一个关于数字心理健康的选修模块。我们采用混合方法分析选修模块的回复,包括描述性和推断性统计,以及对开放文本回复进行主题编码。
本研究结果显示,焦虑(b=-0.07;P<.001)是应用程序采用的显著预测因素,而抑郁(b=0.03;P=.12)和积极心理健康(b=-0.02;P=.17)不是。突出的定性研究结果表明,最期望的应用程序功能包括提示和建议、获取资源和信息,以及全天都有互动的按需支持。参与者还建议,总体上希望将人际互动融入应用程序中。正如预期的那样,存在犹豫态度,定性结果表明,对采用心理健康应用程序缺乏兴趣和偏好。
本研究结果强调,仅仅将数字心理健康应用程序作为工具提供可能不足以支持其在大学校园的使用。尽管许多学生愿意使用心理健康应用程序,但参与者的回复中常见犹豫和不确定性。在大学校园将心理健康应用程序作为资源实施时,与高校合作提高数字素养并提供资源,让学生能够判断何时适合使用应用程序可能会有所帮助。