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Acceptability, Use, and Safety of a Mobile Phone App (BlueIce) for Young People Who Self-Harm: Qualitative Study of Service Users' Experience.

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TLDR
BlueIce was judged to be a helpful and safe way of supporting adolescents to manage thoughts of self-harming and provided initial support for the acceptability of BlueIce as a self-help intervention used in conjunction with the traditional face-to-face therapy.
Abstract
Background: Self-harm is common among adolescents and is associated with a number of negative psychosocial outcomes including a higher risk of suicide. Recent reviews highlight the lack of research into specific interventions for children and young people who self-harm. Developing innovative interventions that are coproduced with individuals with lived experience and that reduce self-harm are key challenges for self-harm prevention. Objective: The aim of this study was to explore the acceptability, use, and safety of BlueIce, a mobile phone app for young people who self-harm and who are attending child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS). Methods: This study is part of a mixed methods phase 1 trial of BlueIce. Young people aged 12-17 years attending specialist CAMHS were recruited. Clinicians were invited to refer young people who were self-harming or who had a history of self-harm. On consent being obtained and baseline measures taken, participants used BlueIce as an adjunct to usual care for an initial familiarization period of 2 weeks. If after this time they wanted to continue, they used BlueIce for a further 10 weeks. Semistructured interviews were conducted at postfamiliarization (2 weeks after using BlueIce) and postuse (12 weeks after using BlueIce) to assess the acceptability, use, and safety of BlueIce. We undertook a qualitative analysis using a deductive approach, and then an inductive approach, to investigate common themes. Results: Postfamiliarization interviews were conducted with 40 participants. Of these, 37 participants elected to use BlueIce, with postuse interviews being conducted with 33 participants. Following 6 key themes emerged from the data: (1) appraisal of BlueIce, (2) usability of BlueIce, (3) safety, (4) benefits of BlueIce, (5) agency and control, and (6) BlueIce less helpful. The participants reported that BlueIce was accessible, easy to use, and convenient. Many highlighted the mood diary and mood lifter sections as particularly helpful in offering a way to track their moods and offering new strategies to manage their thoughts to self-harm. No adverse effects were reported. For those who did not find BlueIce helpful, issues around motivation to stop self-harming impeded their ability to use the app. Conclusions: BlueIce was judged to be a helpful and safe way of supporting adolescents to manage thoughts of self-harming. Adolescents reported numerous benefits of using BlueIce, and all would recommend the app to other young people who were struggling with self-harm. These preliminary findings are encouraging and provide initial support for the acceptability of BlueIce as a self-help intervention used in conjunction with the traditional face-to-face therapy.

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Patients' Perceptions of mHealth Apps: Meta-Ethnographic Review of Qualitative Studies.

TL;DR: The strengths and weaknesses of using mHealth apps from the patients’ point of view are presented, which can be categorized into two main aspects: engaging patients in their own health care and increasing patient empowerment.
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Smartphone Apps for the Treatment of Mental Disorders: Systematic Review.

TL;DR: There is a need for designing interventions for the full breadth of mental disorders, rather than primarily focusing on most prevalent disorders, and an increasingly systematic focus, involving RCTs, is needed to improve the robustness and trustworthiness of assessments.
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Usage and Acceptability of the iBobbly App: Pilot Trial for Suicide Prevention in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Youth.

TL;DR: This study showed that Indigenous youth are early and frequent users of technology in general, and they regarded the iBobbly app to be culturally safe and of therapeutic value, and it was associated with self-reported improvements in psychological wellbeing, mental health literacy, and reductions in shame.
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A Feasibility Trial of Power Up: Smartphone App to Support Patient Activation and Shared Decision Making for Mental Health in Young People

TL;DR: The findings of this study indicate that the app is acceptable, and it is feasible to examine the effectiveness of Power Up in a prospective cluster randomized controlled trial.
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TL;DR: Thematic analysis is a poorly demarcated, rarely acknowledged, yet widely used qualitative analytic method within psychology as mentioned in this paper, and it offers an accessible and theoretically flexible approach to analysing qualitative data.
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The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire: A Research Note

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TL;DR: The need for a “science of attrition” is argued, that is, a need to develop models for discontinuation of e health applications and the related phenomenon of participants dropping out of eHealth trials, as well as measures to be reported including the relative risk of dropping out or of stopping the use of an application.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-harm and suicide in adolescents.

TL;DR: Major challenges include the development of greater understanding of the factors that contribute to self-harm and suicide in young people, especially mechanisms underlying contagion and the effect of new media.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global patterns of mortality in young people: a systematic analysis of population health data

TL;DR: Present global priorities for adolescent health policy are an important but insufficient response to prevent mortality in an age-group in which more than two in five deaths are due to intentional and unintentional injuries.
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