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Developing digital interventions for people living with serious mental illness: perspectives from three mHealth studies
The rapidly expanding field of mobile health (mHealth) seeks to harness increasingly affordable and ubiquitous mobile digital technologies including smartphones, tablets, apps and wearable devices to enhance clinical care. Accumulating evidence suggests that mHealth interventions are increasingly be...
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Published in: | BMJ mental health 2017-11, Vol.20 (4), p.98-101 |
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container_title | BMJ mental health |
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creator | Biagianti, Bruno Hidalgo-Mazzei, Diego Meyer, Nicholas |
description | The rapidly expanding field of mobile health (mHealth) seeks to harness increasingly affordable and ubiquitous mobile digital technologies including smartphones, tablets, apps and wearable devices to enhance clinical care. Accumulating evidence suggests that mHealth interventions are increasingly being adopted and valued by people living with serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, as a means of better understanding and managing their condition. We draw on experiences from three geographically and methodologically distinct mHealth studies to provide a pragmatic overview of the key challenges and considerations relating to the process of developing digital interventions for this population. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1136/eb-2017-102765 |
format | article |
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subjects | Bipolar disorder Bipolar Disorder - diagnosis Bipolar Disorder - therapy Cognition & reasoning Humans Mental disorders Mental health Mobile Applications Schizophrenia - diagnosis Schizophrenia - therapy Smartphones Telemedicine Telemedicine - methods |
title | Developing digital interventions for people living with serious mental illness: perspectives from three mHealth studies |
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