2020
DOI: 10.1176/appi.ps.201900203
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Mobile Phone and Smartphone Use by People With Serious Mental Illness

Abstract: Objective: Mobile technologies, such as smartphones, can improve health services by delivering assessments and interventions that reach people in their daily lives. There is, however, disagreement regarding whether people with serious mental illness make meaningful use of mobile technology and whether interventions that rely on mobile technology should be tailored for this population.Methods: At two clinics, 249 people with serious mental illness were interviewed regarding mobile phone use, and their cognitive… Show more

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Cited by 74 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, recognition of the potential of using technology, especially mobile technology, to support mental health (mHealth) was quickly increasing (Ben-Zeev et al 2020 ; Buck et al 2020 ; Lecomte et al 2020 ; Santarossa et al 2018 ). Several factors contributed to this recognition, including the increase in smartphone ownership among individuals with mental illness (Firth et al 2016 ; Pew Research Center 2018 ; Young et al 2020 ), proliferation of available health and mental health apps (IQVIA 2017 ), and strong interest in and acceptability of mobile technology use by individuals living with mental illness (Carpenter-Song 2020 ; Carpenter-Song et al 2018 ; Firth et al 2016 ; Jonathan et al 2019 ; Noel et al 2019a , b ; Roberts et al 2018 ; Santarossa et al 2018 ). Yet recognition of the potential benefits of technology alone has not transformed mental health care.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, recognition of the potential of using technology, especially mobile technology, to support mental health (mHealth) was quickly increasing (Ben-Zeev et al 2020 ; Buck et al 2020 ; Lecomte et al 2020 ; Santarossa et al 2018 ). Several factors contributed to this recognition, including the increase in smartphone ownership among individuals with mental illness (Firth et al 2016 ; Pew Research Center 2018 ; Young et al 2020 ), proliferation of available health and mental health apps (IQVIA 2017 ), and strong interest in and acceptability of mobile technology use by individuals living with mental illness (Carpenter-Song 2020 ; Carpenter-Song et al 2018 ; Firth et al 2016 ; Jonathan et al 2019 ; Noel et al 2019a , b ; Roberts et al 2018 ; Santarossa et al 2018 ). Yet recognition of the potential benefits of technology alone has not transformed mental health care.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Telepsychiatry requires camera, internet connection, and computer all integrated into a single devicesuch integration is feasible via smartphones for most patients. Patients with schizophrenia are more likely to have a phone than computer (Aschbrenner et al, 2018) with nearly 50% of people with schizophrenia owning a smartphone in 2015 (Young et al, 2019) and 66% in 2018 . Considering that even in the general population 37% of adults access the internet primarily via smartphones and 58% for those ages 18 to 29 according to Pew data from 2019it is clear that telehealth cannot be separated from mobile health and smartphones.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, participation was limited to individuals owning iOS devices. Apps on non-iOS smart devices using the Android operating system, which are more commonly used in psychiatric populations [ 49 ], are needed. Third, although the needs assessment technique in this study prioritized participant-scheduled prompts, participants were not able to change the schedule or initiate a response when they encountered a need outside of the schedule, resulting in potential missed opportunities to capture more nuanced aspects of individual variability in needs and preferences.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%