Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2024 Mar 15;12:e45860. doi: 10.2196/45860.
Physical activity has well-known and broad health benefits, including antidepressive and anxiolytic effects. However, only approximately half of Americans meet even the minimum exercise recommendations. Individuals with anxiety, depression, or related conditions are even less likely to do so. With the advent of mobile sensors and phones, experts have quickly noted the utility of technology for the enhanced measurement of and intervention for physical activity. In addition to being more accessible than in-person approaches, technology-driven interventions may uniquely engage key mechanisms of behavior change such as self-awareness.
This study aims to provide a narrative overview and specific recommendations for future research on smartphone-based physical activity interventions for psychological disorders or concerns.
In this paper, we summarized early efforts to adapt and test smartphone-based or smartphone-supported physical activity interventions for mental health. The included articles described or reported smartphone-delivered or smartphone-supported interventions intended to increase physical activity or reduce sedentary behavior and included an emotional disorder, concern, or symptom as an outcome measure. We attempted to extract details regarding the intervention designs, trial designs, study populations, outcome measures, and inclusion of adaptations specifically for mental health. In taking a narrative lens, we drew attention to the type of work that has been done and used these exemplars to discuss key directions to build on.
To date, most studies have examined mental health outcomes as secondary or exploratory variables largely in the context of managing medical concerns (eg, cancer and diabetes). Few trials have recruited psychiatric populations or explicitly aimed to target psychiatric concerns. Consequently, although there are encouraging signals that smartphone-based physical activity interventions could be feasible, acceptable, and efficacious for individuals with mental illnesses, this remains an underexplored area.
Promising avenues for tailoring validated smartphone-based interventions include adding psychoeducation (eg, the relationship between depression, physical activity, and inactivity), offering psychosocial treatment in parallel (eg, cognitive restructuring), and adding personalized coaching. To conclude, we offer specific recommendations for future research, treatment development, and implementation in this area, which remains open and promising for flexible, highly scalable support.
身体活动对健康有显著且广泛的益处,包括抗抑郁和抗焦虑作用。然而,只有大约一半的美国人甚至满足最低的运动推荐量。患有焦虑、抑郁或相关疾病的人则更不可能做到这一点。随着移动传感器和手机的出现,专家们很快注意到技术在增强身体活动的测量和干预方面的实用性。除了比面对面方法更易获得之外,技术驱动的干预措施可能会以独特的方式吸引行为改变的关键机制,例如自我意识。
本研究旨在为基于智能手机的身体活动干预措施在心理障碍或问题方面的未来研究提供叙述性概述和具体建议。
在本文中,我们总结了早期为适应和测试基于智能手机的或支持智能手机的身体活动干预措施以促进心理健康而进行的努力。所纳入的文章描述或报告了旨在增加身体活动或减少久坐行为的智能手机提供或支持的干预措施,并将情绪障碍、问题或症状作为结果测量指标。我们试图提取有关干预设计、试验设计、研究人群、结果测量以及专门针对心理健康的适应措施的详细信息。在采用叙述性视角的同时,我们还关注了已经完成的工作类型,并利用这些范例来讨论进一步发展的关键方向。
迄今为止,大多数研究主要在管理医疗问题(如癌症和糖尿病)的背景下将心理健康结果作为次要或探索性变量进行检查。很少有试验招募精神科患者或明确针对精神健康问题进行目标定位。因此,尽管有令人鼓舞的迹象表明基于智能手机的身体活动干预措施对患有精神疾病的个体来说是可行、可接受和有效的,但这仍然是一个尚未得到充分探索的领域。
定制经过验证的基于智能手机的干预措施的有前途的途径包括增加心理教育(例如,抑郁、身体活动和不活动之间的关系)、同时提供心理社会治疗(例如,认知重构)以及添加个性化指导。总之,我们在这一领域为未来的研究、治疗开发和实施提供了具体建议,该领域仍然具有灵活性和高度可扩展性的支持潜力,有待进一步探索。