Common themes and emerging trends for the use of technology to support mental health and psychosocial well-being in limited resource settings: A review of the literature.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2019
Journal Title
Psychiatry research
MeSH Headings
Mental Health, Health Resources, Technology
Abstract
There are significant disparities in access to mental health care. With the burgeoning of technologies for health, digital tools have been leveraged within mental health and psychosocial support programming (eMental health). A review of the literature was conducted to understand and identify how eMental health has been used in resource-limited settings in general. PubMed, Ovid Medline and Web of Science were searched. Six-hundred and thirty full-text articles were identified and assessed for eligibility; of those, 67 articles met the inclusion criteria and were analyzed. The most common mental health use cases were for depression (n = 25) and general mental health and well-being (n = 21). Roughly one-third used a website or Internet-enabled intervention (n = 23) and nearly one-third used an SMS intervention (n = 22). Technology was applied to enhance service delivery (n = 32), behavior change communication (n = 26) and data collection (n = 8), and specifically dealt with adherence (n = 7), ecological momentary assessments (n = 7), well-being promotion (n = 5), education (n = 8), telemedicine (n = 28), machine learning (n = 5) and games (n = 2). Emerging trends identified wearables, predictive analytics, robots and virtual reality as promising areas. eMental health interventions that leverage low-tech tools can introduce, strengthen and expand mental health and psychosocial support services and can be a starting point for future, advanced tools.
ISSN
1872-7123
First Page
112594
Last Page
112594
Recommended Citation
Kaonga, Nadi Nina and Morgan, Jonathan, "Common themes and emerging trends for the use of technology to support mental health and psychosocial well-being in limited resource settings: A review of the literature." (2019). MaineHealth Maine Medical Center. 1413.
https://knowledgeconnection.mainehealth.org/mmc/1413