4.7 Review

Potential and Pitfalls of Mobile Mental Health Apps in Traditional Treatment: An Umbrella Review

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERSONALIZED MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jpm12091376

Keywords

mobile applications; mental health; technology-based care

Funding

  1. Singapore Management University from the Ministry of Education Academy Research Fund Tier 1 [20-C242-SMU-001, 21-SOSS-SMU-023]
  2. Lee Kong Chian Fund for Research Excellence

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This umbrella review provides a holistic summary of the key potential and pitfalls of mobile mental health apps. The majority of reviewed studies support the effectiveness of these apps in providing timely support, reducing mental healthcare costs, combating stigma, and enhancing therapeutic outcomes. However, issues with user engagement, safety in emergencies, privacy breaches, and the use of non-evidence-based approaches are also identified.
While the rapid growth of mobile mental health applications has offered an avenue of support unbridled by physical distance, time, and cost, the digitalization of traditional interventions has also triggered doubts surrounding their effectiveness and safety. Given the need for a more comprehensive and up-to-date understanding of mobile mental health apps in traditional treatment, this umbrella review provides a holistic summary of their key potential and pitfalls. A total of 36 reviews published between 2014 and 2022-including systematic reviews, meta-analyses, scoping reviews, and literature reviews-were identified from the Cochrane library, Medline (via PubMed Central), and Scopus databases. The majority of results supported the key potential of apps in helping to (1) provide timely support, (2) ease the costs of mental healthcare, (3) combat stigma in help-seeking, and (4) enhance therapeutic outcomes. Our results also identified common themes of apps' pitfalls (i.e., challenges faced by app users), including (1) user engagement issues, (2) safety issues in emergencies, (3) privacy and confidentiality breaches, and (4) the utilization of non-evidence-based approaches. We synthesize the potential and pitfalls of mental health apps provided by the reviews and outline critical avenues for future research.

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