Abstract

Background: Actissist is a smartphone app designed to deliver an intervention grounded in cognitive behavior therapy for early psychosis. Actissist was developed by a multidisciplinary team of academics, clinicians, experts by experience and software engineers. Actissist has been tested in two trials, the first a proof-of-concept trial where Actissist was safe, acceptable and feasible, the second, a powered randomized controlled trial.Objective: This article describes how our multidisciplinary team designed and developed Actissist. This article describes: (i) how Actissist was informed by initial qualitative interviews and focus groups and an expert reference group; (ii) refinements made to the app based on ongoing user feedback; (iii) successes and challenges encountered; and (iv) learning points and recommendations for involving stakeholders in digital health interventions.Methods: Expert reference group meetings informed the development of Actissist and design of subsequent trials, which included individuals with lived experience of psychosis, clinicians, academics, computer scientists and software engineers. Person-centered stakeholder involvement was promoted using focus groups and qualitative interviews prior to the development of the app, which informed version one of Actissist. Interviews were carried out with participants who had used Actissist. Two further versions of Actissist were developed following additional rounds of testing.Results: Multidisciplinary working throughout the Actissist project led to the development, inclusion and improvement of the app design and content. These changes and features included non-directive and compassionate content, co-designed recovery videos, relaxation exercises, psychoeducation material, ability to “favorite” areas of the app that users found helpful, and goal-setting. Challenges to collaborative working included discrepancies between what stakeholders want and what is technically possible to deliver, resource pressures, trying to deliver desired features within the boundaries of fundamental trial design considerations, and power imbalances associated with multidisciplinary working.Conclusions: The involvement of stakeholders in the design and development and delivery of Actissist has been fundamental to our development approach. Through this collaborative process, we have identified different perspectives and ideas that would have not been generated by the research team alone.Clinical Trial Registrations: Proof-of-concept trial: http://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN34966555Fully-powered randomized controlled trial: https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN76986679

Highlights

  • Psychological therapies are recommended to support individuals who experience psychosis, in addition to the provision of pharmacological interventions [1,2,3]

  • We describe a range of activities that we implemented to promote collaboration throughout the design and development of the Actissist app [39], a CBT-informed and self-guided smartphone app designed to help scale up access to CBT-informed information and strategies for people experiencing early psychosis

  • We provide an account of the challenges faced during the pursuit of multidisciplinary collaborative working and make recommendations for involving stakeholders in future digital health projects

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Summary

Introduction

Psychological therapies are recommended to support individuals who experience psychosis, in addition to the provision of pharmacological interventions [1,2,3]. Time-sensitive access to evidence-based interventions is important because a long duration of untreated psychosis is associated with a range of negative outcomes, including positive symptom severity, social functioning, quality of life and recovery [4, 5]. Intervention is recommended for people who have experienced a first episode of psychosis [6] and, in comparison with treatment as usual, is associated with better outcomes for treatment discontinuation, hospitalization, negative, positive and total symptom severity, and involvement at school and work [7]. In accordance with clinical guidelines, early intervention services aim to provide time-sensitive access to a range of treatment options, including psychological therapy [8,9,10]. Actissist has been tested in two trials, the first a proof-of-concept trial where Actissist was safe, acceptable and feasible, the second, a powered randomized controlled trial

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