Abstract

The demand outstripping supply of mental health resources during the COVID-19 pandemic presents opportunities for digital technology tools to fill this new gap and, in the process, demonstrate capabilities to increase their effectiveness and efficiency. However, technology-enabled services have faced challenges in being sustainably implemented despite showing promising outcomes in efficacy trials since the early 2000s. The ongoing failure of these implementations has been addressed in reconceptualized models and frameworks, along with various efforts to branch out among disparate developers and clinical researchers to provide them with a key for furthering evaluative research. However, the limitations of traditional research methods in dealing with the complexities of mental health care warrant a diversified approach. The crux of the challenges of digital mental health implementation is the efficacy and evaluation of existing studies. Web-based interventions are increasingly used during the pandemic, allowing for affordable access to psychological therapies. However, a lagging infrastructure and skill base has limited the application of digital solutions in mental health care. Methodologies need to be converged owing to the rapid development of digital technologies that have outpaced the evaluation of rigorous digital mental health interventions and strategies to prevent mental illness. The functions and implications of human-computer interaction require a better understanding to overcome engagement barriers, especially with predictive technologies. Explainable artificial intelligence is being incorporated into digital mental health implementation to obtain positive and responsible outcomes. Investment in digital platforms and associated apps for real-time screening, tracking, and treatment offer the promise of cost-effectiveness in vulnerable populations. Although machine learning has been limited by study conduct and reporting methods, the increasing use of unstructured data has strengthened its potential. Early evidence suggests that the advantages outweigh the disadvantages of incrementing such technology. The limitations of an evidence-based approach require better integration of decision support tools to guide policymakers with digital mental health implementation. There is a complex range of issues with effectiveness, equity, access, and ethics (eg, privacy, confidentiality, fairness, transparency, reproducibility, and accountability), which warrant resolution. Evidence-informed policies, development of eminent digital products and services, and skills to use and maintain these solutions are required. Studies need to focus on developing digital platforms with explainable artificial intelligence–based apps to enhance resilience and guide the treatment decisions of mental health practitioners. Investments in digital mental health should ensure their safety and workability. End users should encourage the use of innovative methods to encourage developers to effectively evaluate their products and services and to render them a worthwhile investment. Technology-enabled services in a hybrid model of care are most likely to be effective (eg, specialists using these services among vulnerable, at-risk populations but not severe cases of mental ill health).

Highlights

  • The uncertainties of the COVID-19 pandemic, overlapping issues, and the long-term impact on population mental health make it difficult to predict the issues that would become prevalent

  • artificial intelligence digital therapeutic alliance (DTA) (AI) approaches are being implemented in digital interventions and social suicide prevention initiatives, to enhance user experience and optimize personalized mental health care [15,16]

  • Worldwide changes associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, notably demand outstripping supply, have presented a dilemma for decision-making related to mental health care with regards to digital mental health research and highly efficacious clinical trials

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Summary

Introduction

The uncertainties of the COVID-19 pandemic, overlapping issues, and the long-term impact on population mental health make it difficult to predict the issues that would become prevalent. Challenges; COVID-19; digital mental health implementation; explainable artificial intelligence; hybrid model of care; human-computer interaction; resilience; technology https://mental.jmir.org/2021/3/e26811 The current pandemic has exacerbated the demand for mental health services, providing an opportunity for the supply of digital technologies (eg, videoconferencing-based tele-mental health interventions) and data-driven innovation (eg, predictive technologies), which are emerging to complement traditional in-person and telehealth aspects of psychology and psychiatry [6,7].

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