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Burst versus continuous delivery design in digital mental health interventions: Evidence from a randomized clinical trial

Marciniak, Marta Anna; Shanahan, Lilly; Yuen, Kenneth S L; Veer, Ilya Milos; Walter, Henrik; Tuescher, Oliver; Kobylińska, Dorota; Kalisch, Raffael; Hermans, Erno; Binder, Harald; Kleim, Birgit (2024). Burst versus continuous delivery design in digital mental health interventions: Evidence from a randomized clinical trial. Digital Health, 10:online.

Abstract

Objective
Digital mental health interventions delivered via smartphone-based apps effectively treat various conditions; however, optimizing their efficacy while minimizing participant burden remains a key challenge. In this study, we investigated the potential benefits of a burst delivery design (i.e. interventions delivered only in pre-defined time intervals) in comparison to the continuous delivery of interventions. Methods
We randomly assigned 93 participants to the continuous delivery (CD) or burst delivery (BD) group. The CD group engaged in ReApp, a mobile app that increases positive cognitive reappraisal with a consistent delivery schedule that provides five prompts per day throughout the 3-week-long study, while the BD group received five daily prompts only in the first and third weeks of the study.
Results
No significant differences were found between the groups in terms of adherence, mental health outcomes (specifically depressive and anxiety symptoms), level of perceived stress, and perceived helpfulness of intervention. The BD group showed a significantly decreased perceived difficulty of intervention over time.
Conclusions
The results suggest that the burst delivery may be as suitable for digital mental health interventions as the continuous delivery. The perceived difficulty of the intervention declined more steeply for the BD group, indicating that it improved the feasibility of the positive cognitive reappraisal intervention without hurting its efficacy. This outcome may inform the design of less burdensome interventions with improved outcomes in future research.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:Special Collections > Centers of Competence > Healthy Longevity Center
Dewey Decimal Classification:150 Psychology
610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Health Sciences > Health Policy
Health Sciences > Health Informatics
Physical Sciences > Computer Science Applications
Health Sciences > Health Information Management
Uncontrolled Keywords:Ecological momentary intervention, digital health, mental health, intervention delivery, burst delivery design, reappraisal
Language:English
Date:1 January 2024
Deposited On:24 Jun 2024 15:26
Last Modified:30 Sep 2024 03:42
Publisher:Sage Publications
ISSN:2055-2076
OA Status:Gold
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076241249267
PubMed ID:38698832
Project Information:
  • Funder: H2020
  • Grant ID: 777084
  • Project Title: DynaMORE - Dynamic MOdelling of REsilience
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