Gaina Marcel-Alexandru, Sbarcea Stefan-Vladimir, Popa Bianca-Stefana, Stefanescu Bogdan-Victor, Gaina Alexandra-Maria, Szalontay Andreea-Silvana, Bolos Alexandra, Stefanescu Cristinel
Psychiatry, Department of Medicine III, Faculty of Medicine, Grigore T. Popa University of Medicine and Pharmacy of Iasi, 16 Universitatii Street, 700115 Iasi, Romania.
Institute of Psychiatry "Socola", 36 Bucium Street, 700282 Iasi, Romania.
Brain Sci. 2024 Jun 27;14(7):651. doi: 10.3390/brainsci14070651.
Specific phobias impact over 400 million people worldwide. Digitalizing mental health could alleviate the burden. Still, although the corporate-driven Metaverse is expanding rapidly, there needs to be more momentum in harnessing virtual reality exposure therapy uptake. This study aims to conceptualize, develop, and deploy a free Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy (VRET) application specifically designed for treating acrophobia and claustrophobia. This pilot study, which holds the promise of a future where mental health is more accessible and effective, explores the feasibility of leveraging transdisciplinary collaboration among specialists to create a safe, accessible, and effective VRET solution. We conducted a Delphi heuristic approach involving bioethicists, neuroscientists, and tech developers. Second, we reviewed the existing psychological theories and therapeutic strategies for addressing phobias in VR. Third, we conceptualized a thematic analysis-derived framework for a safe, adaptive-gamified free exposure to virtual reality acrophobia and claustrophobia (SAFEvR ACT). Finally, we provide an overview of the iterative improvements made during 12 workshops and 76 weekly briefings on developmental implementations. We developed the SAFEvR ACT into a proof-of-concept application freely deployed on the MentalVerse app platform. Our safety-focused approach can benefit from prevalidation perspectives within future randomized control trials. The resulting application derived from the SAFEvR ACT framework represents a blueprint to counter the current lack of iVR mental health uptake by offering a free VRET alternative. Future research should aim towards developing similar free platforms to lessen mental health burdens and gather quantitative data. We conclude with a call to action to researchers to fine-tune our current approach and take a stand for free digital mental health within MentalVeRse.app.
特定恐惧症影响着全球超过4亿人。心理健康数字化可以减轻负担。尽管如此,尽管企业驱动的元宇宙正在迅速扩张,但在利用虚拟现实暴露疗法方面仍缺乏足够的动力。本研究旨在概念化、开发和部署一款专门设计用于治疗恐高症和幽闭恐惧症的免费虚拟现实暴露疗法(VRET)应用程序。这项试点研究有望实现心理健康更易获得且更有效的未来,它探索了利用专家之间的跨学科合作来创建一个安全、可及且有效的VRET解决方案的可行性。我们采用了一种德尔菲启发式方法,涉及生物伦理学家、神经科学家和技术开发者。其次,我们回顾了现有的用于在虚拟现实中解决恐惧症的心理学理论和治疗策略。第三,我们为安全、自适应游戏化的免费虚拟现实恐高症和幽闭恐惧症暴露(SAFEvR ACT)概念化了一个基于主题分析的框架。最后,我们概述了在12次研讨会和76次关于开发实施的每周简报期间所做的迭代改进。我们将SAFEvR ACT开发成一个可在MentalVerse应用程序平台上免费部署的概念验证应用程序。我们以安全为重点的方法可以从未来随机对照试验中的预验证角度受益。源自SAFEvR ACT框架的最终应用程序代表了一个蓝图,通过提供免费的VRET替代方案来应对当前缺乏沉浸式虚拟现实心理健康应用的情况。未来的研究应致力于开发类似的免费平台,以减轻心理健康负担并收集定量数据。我们呼吁研究人员微调我们当前的方法,并在MentalVeRse.app中支持免费数字心理健康,以此作为结论。