Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership

Digital technology, including the use of internet, smartphones and wearables, holds the promise to bridge the mental health treatment gap by offering a more accessible, potentially less stigmatising, flexible and tailored approach to mental healthcare. However, the evidence-base for digital mental h...

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Main Authors: Hollis, Chris, Sampson, Stephanie, Simons, Lucy, Davies, E. Bethan, Churchill, Rachel, Betton, Victoria, Butler, Debbie, Chapman, Kathy, Easton, Katherine, Gronlund, Toto Anne, Kabir, Thomas, Rawsthorne, Mat, Rye, Elizabeth, Tomlin, André
Format: Article
Published: Lancet 2018
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/53141/
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author Hollis, Chris
Sampson, Stephanie
Simons, Lucy
Davies, E. Bethan
Churchill, Rachel
Betton, Victoria
Butler, Debbie
Chapman, Kathy
Easton, Katherine
Gronlund, Toto Anne
Kabir, Thomas
Rawsthorne, Mat
Rye, Elizabeth
Tomlin, André
author_facet Hollis, Chris
Sampson, Stephanie
Simons, Lucy
Davies, E. Bethan
Churchill, Rachel
Betton, Victoria
Butler, Debbie
Chapman, Kathy
Easton, Katherine
Gronlund, Toto Anne
Kabir, Thomas
Rawsthorne, Mat
Rye, Elizabeth
Tomlin, André
author_sort Hollis, Chris
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Digital technology, including the use of internet, smartphones and wearables, holds the promise to bridge the mental health treatment gap by offering a more accessible, potentially less stigmatising, flexible and tailored approach to mental healthcare. However, the evidence-base for digital mental health interventions and demonstration of clinical- and cost-effectiveness in real-world settings remains inadequate. The James Lind Alliance (JLA) Priority Setting Partnership (PSP) for digital technology in mental healthcare was established to identify research priorities that reflected the perspectives and unmet needs of people with lived experience of mental health problems, mental health service users, their carers, and healthcare practitioners. 644 participants contributed over 1350 separate questions, which were reduced by qualitative thematic analysis into six overarching themes. Following removal of out of scope questions and a comprehensive search of existing evidence, 134 questions were verified as uncertainties suitable for research. These questions were then ranked online and in workshops by 628 participants to produce a shortlist of 26. The top ten research priorities were identified by consensus at a stakeholder workshop. The top ten priorities should inform research policy and funding in this field. Identified priorities primarily relate to the safety and efficacy of digital technology interventions in comparison with face to face interventions, evidence of population reach, mechanisms of therapeutic change, and how best to optimize the effectiveness of digital interventions in combination with human support.
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spelling nottingham-531412020-05-04T19:47:04Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/53141/ Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership Hollis, Chris Sampson, Stephanie Simons, Lucy Davies, E. Bethan Churchill, Rachel Betton, Victoria Butler, Debbie Chapman, Kathy Easton, Katherine Gronlund, Toto Anne Kabir, Thomas Rawsthorne, Mat Rye, Elizabeth Tomlin, André Digital technology, including the use of internet, smartphones and wearables, holds the promise to bridge the mental health treatment gap by offering a more accessible, potentially less stigmatising, flexible and tailored approach to mental healthcare. However, the evidence-base for digital mental health interventions and demonstration of clinical- and cost-effectiveness in real-world settings remains inadequate. The James Lind Alliance (JLA) Priority Setting Partnership (PSP) for digital technology in mental healthcare was established to identify research priorities that reflected the perspectives and unmet needs of people with lived experience of mental health problems, mental health service users, their carers, and healthcare practitioners. 644 participants contributed over 1350 separate questions, which were reduced by qualitative thematic analysis into six overarching themes. Following removal of out of scope questions and a comprehensive search of existing evidence, 134 questions were verified as uncertainties suitable for research. These questions were then ranked online and in workshops by 628 participants to produce a shortlist of 26. The top ten research priorities were identified by consensus at a stakeholder workshop. The top ten priorities should inform research policy and funding in this field. Identified priorities primarily relate to the safety and efficacy of digital technology interventions in comparison with face to face interventions, evidence of population reach, mechanisms of therapeutic change, and how best to optimize the effectiveness of digital interventions in combination with human support. Lancet 2018-07-20 Article PeerReviewed Hollis, Chris, Sampson, Stephanie, Simons, Lucy, Davies, E. Bethan, Churchill, Rachel, Betton, Victoria, Butler, Debbie, Chapman, Kathy, Easton, Katherine, Gronlund, Toto Anne, Kabir, Thomas, Rawsthorne, Mat, Rye, Elizabeth and Tomlin, André (2018) Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership. Lancet Psychiatry . ISSN 2215-0374 (In Press)
spellingShingle Hollis, Chris
Sampson, Stephanie
Simons, Lucy
Davies, E. Bethan
Churchill, Rachel
Betton, Victoria
Butler, Debbie
Chapman, Kathy
Easton, Katherine
Gronlund, Toto Anne
Kabir, Thomas
Rawsthorne, Mat
Rye, Elizabeth
Tomlin, André
Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership
title Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership
title_full Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership
title_fullStr Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership
title_full_unstemmed Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership
title_short Identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership
title_sort identifying research priorities for digital technology in mental healthcare: results of the james lind alliance priority setting partnership
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/53141/