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Article ; Online: Developing an explanatory theoretical model for engagement with a web-based mental health platform: results of a mixed methods study.

Gordon, Dara / Hensel, Jennifer / Bouck, Zachary / Desveaux, Laura / Soobiah, Charlene / Saragosa, Marianne / Jeffs, Lianne / Bhatia, Sacha / Shaw, James

BMC psychiatry

2021  Volume 21, Issue 1, Page(s) 417

Abstract: ... in the form of self-directed mental health platforms. The Big White Wall (BWW) is a web-based platform ... of engagement with platforms such as BWW is not easily predicted. We propose a theoretical framework ... during the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been increasing development and uptake of web-based interventions ...

Abstract Background: With the growing need for accessible, high-quality mental health services, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been increasing development and uptake of web-based interventions in the form of self-directed mental health platforms. The Big White Wall (BWW) is a web-based platform for people experiencing mental illness and addiction that offers a range of evidence-based self-directed treatment strategies. Drawing on existing data from a large-scale evaluation of the implementation of BWW in Ontario, Canada (which involved a pragmatic randomized controlled trail with an embedded qualitative process evaluation), we sought to investigate the influences on the extent to which people engage with BWW.
Methods: In this paper we drew on BWW trial participants' usage data (number of logins) and the qualitative data from the process evaluation that explored participants' experiences, engagement with and reactions to BWW.
Results: Our results showed that there were highly complex relationships between the influences that contributed to the level of engagement with BWW intervention. We found that a) how people expected to benefit from using a platform like BWW was an important indicator of their future usage, b) moderate perceived symptoms were linked with higher engagement; whereas fewer actual depressive symptoms predicted use and anxiety had a positive linear relationship with usage, and that c) usage depended on positive early experiences with the platform.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the nature of engagement with platforms such as BWW is not easily predicted. We propose a theoretical framework for explaining the level of user engagement with BWW that might also be generalizable to other similar platforms.
MeSH term(s) COVID-19 ; Humans ; Internet ; Mental Health ; Models, Theoretical ; Ontario ; Pandemics ; SARS-CoV-2
Language English
Publishing date 2021-08-21
Publishing country England
Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
ZDB-ID 2050438-X
ISSN 1471-244X ; 1471-244X
ISSN (online) 1471-244X
ISSN 1471-244X
DOI 10.1186/s12888-021-03391-z
Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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