Author: Song, Jiaqi; Jiang, Ronghuan; Chen, Nan; Qu, Wei; Liu, Dan; Zhang, Meng; Fan, Hongzhen; Zhao, Yanli; Tan, Shuping
Title: Self-help cognitive behavioral therapy application for COVID-19-related mental health problems: A longitudinal trial Cord-id: 4yjvwawa Document date: 2021_4_15
ID: 4yjvwawa
Snippet: BACKGROUND AND AIM: Recently, the availability and usefulness of mobile self-help mental health applications have increased, but few applications deal with COVID-19-related psychological problems. This study explored the intervention efficacy of a mobile application on addressing psychological problems related to COVID-19. METHODS: A longitudinal control trial involving 129 Chinese participants with depression symptoms was conducted through the mobile application “Care for Your Mental Health a
Document: BACKGROUND AND AIM: Recently, the availability and usefulness of mobile self-help mental health applications have increased, but few applications deal with COVID-19-related psychological problems. This study explored the intervention efficacy of a mobile application on addressing psychological problems related to COVID-19. METHODS: A longitudinal control trial involving 129 Chinese participants with depression symptoms was conducted through the mobile application “Care for Your Mental Health and Sleep during COVID-19†(CMSC) based on WeChat. Participants were divided into two groups: mobile internet cognitive behavioral therapy (MiCBT) and wait-list. The primary outcome was improvement in depression symptoms. Secondary outcomes included improvement in anxiety and insomnia. The MiCBT group received three self-help CBT intervention sessions in one week via CMSC. RESULTS: The MiCBT group showed significant improvement in depression and insomnia (allP < 0.05) compared with the wait-list group. Although both groups showed significant improvement in anxiety at the intervention’s end, compared with the wait-list group, the MiCBT group had no significant advantage. Correlation analysis showed that improvement in depression and anxiety had a significant positive association with education level. Changes in insomnia were significantly negatively correlated with anxiety of COVID-19 at the baseline. CMSC was considered helpful (n=68, 81.9 %) and enjoyable (n=54, 65.9 %) in relieving depression and insomnia during the COVID-19 outbreak. CONCLUSIONS: CMSC is verified to be effective and convenient for improving COVID-19-related depression and insomnia symptoms. A large study with sufficient evidence is required to determine its continuous effect on reducing mental health problems during the pandemic.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- acute respiratory syndrome and adequate evaluation: 1, 2, 3, 4
- acute respiratory syndrome and long term effect: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
- acute respiratory syndrome and low anxiety: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
- acute respiratory syndrome and low resilience: 1, 2
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date