Steyn Sherrie, Slabbert Meggan
Vimbo Health SA (Pty) Ltd, Sandton, South Africa.
Private Practice, Ballito, South Africa.
JMIR Form Res. 2025 Jan 30;9:e54216. doi: 10.2196/54216.
Barriers to mental health assessment and intervention have been well documented within South Africa, in both urban and rural settings. Internationally, evidence has emerged for the effectiveness of technology and, specifically, app-based mental health tools and interventions to help overcome some of these barriers. However, research on digital interventions specific to the South African context and mental health is limited.
This pilot study investigated the feasibility of using an app (Vimbo) to treat symptoms of anxiety and depression in South African adults recruited from a community sample. The Vimbo app is a self-guided, cognitive behavioral therapy-based digital intervention for common mental health difficulties developed for the South African context.
This pilot study used a naturalistic, single-arm design testing the Vimbo app over 12 weeks, from October 2020 to February 2021. Participants were recruited through the South African Depression and Anxiety Group and social media advertisements online. A 2-week retention period was used to allow for a minimum of 2 datasets. App usage and engagement metrics were extracted directly from the back end of the app. Based on the model, researchers expected many users to discontinue usage when their symptom levels entered a healthy range. Pre-post review of symptom levels was used to reflect on clinical recovery status at discontinuation after the retention period.
A total of 218 applicants met study eligibility criteria and were invited to download the Vimbo app. Of these, 52% (114/218) of the participants registered with the app, who indicated multiple variances of depression and anxiety symptoms ranging in severity from mild to severe. Two participants users withdrew from the study. Moreover, 69% (77/112) of users were retained, including 8 who had technical issues with their treatment. When comparing broad uptake across all interested participants, chi-square analysis indicated significantly reduced uptake in participants identifying as "unemployed but seeking employment" (χ=10.47; N=251; P=.03). When considering app usage for the entire cohort (n=69, excluding participants with technical issues), there was a mean of 72.87 (SD 71.425) total module pages read, a mean of 30% (SD 29.473%) of prescribed content completed, and a mean of 19.93 (SD 27.517) times engaging with tools and skills.
Our findings support the case for continued exploration of app-based interventions for treating depression and anxiety in South Africa. Developing strategies to increase access and improve intervention uptake may prove essential to helping mobile health interventions make as significant an impact as possible. Future research should include a randomized controlled trial with a larger sample to further assess the efficacy of app-based interventions in treating mental health difficulties in South Africa.
在南非的城市和农村地区,心理健康评估和干预的障碍都有充分的文献记载。在国际上,有证据表明技术,特别是基于应用程序的心理健康工具和干预措施有助于克服其中一些障碍。然而,针对南非背景和心理健康的数字干预研究有限。
这项试点研究调查了使用一款应用程序(Vimbo)治疗从社区样本中招募的南非成年人焦虑和抑郁症状的可行性。Vimbo应用程序是一种基于认知行为疗法的自我引导式数字干预措施,专为南非背景下常见的心理健康问题而开发。
这项试点研究采用自然主义单臂设计,在2020年10月至2021年2月的12周内对Vimbo应用程序进行测试。参与者通过南非抑郁和焦虑小组以及在线社交媒体广告招募。使用为期2周的留存期以获取至少2个数据集。应用程序的使用情况和参与度指标直接从应用程序后端提取。基于该模型,研究人员预计当许多用户的症状水平进入健康范围时会停止使用。在留存期结束后,通过症状水平的前后评估来反映停药时的临床恢复状态。
共有218名申请者符合研究资格标准并被邀请下载Vimbo应用程序。其中,52%(114/218)的参与者注册了该应用程序,他们表示有从轻度到重度不等的多种抑郁和焦虑症状。两名参与者退出了研究。此外,69%(77/112)的用户被留存,其中8人在治疗过程中遇到技术问题。在比较所有感兴趣参与者的广泛接受情况时,卡方分析表明,自认为“失业但正在找工作”的参与者接受率显著降低(χ=10.47;N=251;P=.03)。在考虑整个队列(n=69,不包括有技术问题的参与者)的应用程序使用情况时,平均总共阅读了72.87(标准差71.425)个模块页面,平均完成了规定内容的30%(标准差29.473%),平均与工具和技能互动了19.93(标准差27.517)次。
我们的研究结果支持在南非继续探索基于应用程序的干预措施来治疗抑郁和焦虑的观点。制定增加可及性和提高干预接受率的策略可能对帮助移动健康干预措施尽可能产生重大影响至关重要。未来的研究应包括一项更大样本量的随机对照试验,以进一步评估基于应用程序的干预措施在治疗南非心理健康问题方面的疗效。