Abstract

BackgroundWeb-based mental health applications may be beneficial, but adoption is often low leaving optimal implementation and payment models unclear. This study examined which users were interested in extended access to a web-based application beyond an initial 3-month trial period and evaluated if an additional 3 months of access was beneficial.MethodsThis study was a concealed extension of a multi-center, pragmatic randomized controlled trial that assessed the benefit of 3 months of access to the Big White Wall (BWW), an anonymous web-based moderated, multi-component mental health application offering self-directed activities and peer support. Trial participants were 16 years of age or older, recruited from hospital-affiliated mental health programs. Participants who received access to the intervention in the main trial and completed 3-month outcome assessments were offered participation. We compared those who were and were not interested in an extension of the intervention, and re-randomized consenting participants 1:1 to receive extended access or not over the subsequent 3 months. Use of the intervention was monitored in the extension group and outcomes were measured at 3 months after re-randomization in both groups. The primary outcome was mental health recovery as assessed by total score on the Recovery Assessment Scale (RAS-r), as in the main trial. Linear mixed models were used to examine the time by group interaction to assess for differences in responses over the 3-month extension study.ResultsOf 233 main trial participants who responded, 119 (51.1%) indicated an interest in receiving extended BWW access. Those who were interested had significantly higher baseline anxiety symptoms compared to those who were not interested. Of the 119, 112 were re-randomized (55 to extended access, 57 to discontinuation). Only 21 of the 55 extended access participants (38.2%) used the intervention during the extension period. Change in RAS-r scores over time was not significantly different between groups (time by group, F(1,77) = 1.02; P = .31).ConclusionsOnly half of eligible participants were interested in extended access to the intervention with decreasing use over time, and no evidence of added benefit. These findings have implications for implementation and payment models for this type of web-based mental health intervention.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.govNCT02896894. Registered retrospectively on September 12, 2016.

Highlights

  • MethodsThis study was a concealed extension of a multi-center, pragmatic randomized controlled trial that assessed the benefit of 3 months of access to the Big White Wall (BWW), an anonymous web-based moderated, multicomponent mental health application offering self-directed activities and peer support

  • Web-based mental health applications may be beneficial, but adoption is often low leaving optimal implementation and payment models unclear

  • Only half of eligible participants were interested in extended access to the intervention with decreasing use over time, and no evidence of added benefit

Read more

Summary

Methods

This study was a concealed extension of a multi-center, pragmatic randomized controlled trial that assessed the benefit of 3 months of access to the Big White Wall (BWW), an anonymous web-based moderated, multicomponent mental health application offering self-directed activities and peer support. Participants who received access to the intervention in the main trial and completed 3-month outcome assessments were offered participation. At the 3-month endpoint of the main trial, participants completing the outcome measures were invited to opt into this extension study, which offered the opportunity to be re-randomized to an additional three months of intervention access or to have intervention access end as planned. Participants who opted in to the extension study were re-randomized 1:1 to receive an additional 3 months of the intervention (extension group) or no additional access to the intervention (discontinuation group), in which case their access to the intervention ended This extension study was included in the trial protocol, which has been published [11]

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call