设计数字心理健康工具以支持美国黑人成年人的需求:定性分析。

IF 2 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Sarah Alexandra Popowski, Jonah Meyerhoff, Olivia Marin Allen, Theresa Nguyen, Terika McCall, Aderonke Bamgbose Pederson, Madhu Reddy, David Mohr, Rachel Kornfield
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:抑郁和焦虑与过高的发病率和死亡率相关,构成了一个主要的卫生保健挑战。这些疾病的发病率正在上升。在美国,与健康相关的抑郁和焦虑负担对黑人成年人的影响可能不成比例,他们面临着影响其心理健康的独特压力源和获得治疗的障碍,包括但不限于系统性种族主义、歧视、对常见心理健康问题(即抑郁、焦虑)的诊断不足、获得文化敏感护理的机会有限,以及黑人社区内外的心理健康污名。目的:本研究旨在通过以用户为中心的设计方法,探讨非寻求治疗的黑人成年人的心理健康体验,以及这些体验与他们对数字心理健康(DMH)工具设计的需求和偏好之间的关系。方法:本研究包括25名未寻求治疗的黑人成年人(18-61岁),他们有抑郁或焦虑的经历,分享他们对DMH工具如何满足他们需求的看法。参与者要么通过社交媒体广告招募,要么通过抑郁和焦虑问卷招募。所有参与者都参加了一个异步在线讨论小组,讨论他们过去和现在的心理健康经历,美国黑人面临的独特挑战,对DMH工具的看法,以及如何定制这些工具以满足他们的心理健康需求。参与者还完成了一项技术调查,他们在18天内使用了一种自动心理健康自我管理短信工具(Small Steps SMS; Audacious Software)。他们在讨论组中分享了他们对工具的看法和对特定设计改进的想法。一个子集(n=6)完成了后续访谈,以详细说明他们的在线讨论组帖子。结果:所有参与者都报告了显著的心理健康问题和管理相关症状的困难。大多数参与者(22/25,88%)表示,种族主义和心理健康耻辱严重影响了他们的心理健康,并限制了他们在黑人社区内外讨论经历的机会。他们对使用DMH工具进行心理健康自我管理感兴趣,几乎所有参与者(23/25,92%)都赞同短信是一种介绍应对抑郁和焦虑症状的技术的方便方式;然而,一些参与者强烈主张增加一些他们认为可以改善节目的设计特征,包括整合以黑人个人经历为中心的内容,为讨论心理健康经历创造非评判性的空间,并为那些需要的人提供正式的心理健康治疗资源。结论:这些发现表明,我们的参与者普遍对DMH工具持赞成态度,这些工具可以提供针对黑人成年人需求的心理教育,自我管理支持,以及解决心理健康问题的安全环境。此外,在设计具有包容性和文化敏感性的DMH工具时,考虑种族歧视和心理健康耻辱的作用至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Designing Digital Mental Health Tools to Support the Needs of Black Adults in the United States: Qualitative Analysis.

Background: Depression and anxiety are associated with excess morbidity and mortality, constituting a major health care challenge. The prevalence of these conditions is increasing. In the United States, the health-related burden of depression and anxiety may disproportionately affect Black adults, who face unique stressors impacting their mental health and barriers to accessing treatment, including but not limited to systemic racism, discrimination, underdiagnosis of common mental health concerns (ie, depression, anxiety), limited access to culturally sensitive care, and mental health stigma within and outside Black communities.

Objective: This study aimed to explore the mental health experiences of nontreatment-seeking Black adults, and how these experiences relate to their needs and preferences for the design of digital mental health (DMH) tools through user-centered design methods.

Methods: This study included 25 nontreatment-seeking Black adults (aged 18-61 years) with experiences of depression or anxiety to share their perspectives on how DMH tools can meet their needs. Participants were recruited either through social media advertisements or depression and anxiety questionnaires. All participants engaged in an asynchronous online discussion group in which they discussed their past and current mental health experiences, distinct challenges faced by Black Americans, and perceptions of DMH tools, as well as how such tools can be tailored to meet their mental health needs. Participants also completed a technology probe in which they used an automated mental health self-management text messaging tool (Small Steps SMS; Audacious Software) for 18 days. They shared their perceptions of the tool and ideas for specific design improvements in the discussion group. A subset (n=6) completed follow-up interviews to elaborate on their online discussion group posts.

Results: All participants reported significant mental health concerns and difficulty managing related symptoms. A majority of participants (22/25, 88%) expressed that racism and mental health stigma severely impacted their mental health and limited opportunities to discuss their experiences within and outside Black communities. They were interested in the use of DMH tools for mental health self-management and nearly all participants (23/25, 92%) endorsed text messaging as a convenient way to introduce techniques for coping with symptoms of depression and anxiety; however, some participants strongly advocated for additional design features that they believed would improve the program, including the integration of content that centers the experiences of Black individuals, creating nonjudgmental spaces for discussing mental health experiences, and linking formal mental health treatment resources for those who want them.

Conclusions: These findings suggest that our participants hold generally favorable views toward DMH tools, which can provide psychoeducation, self-management support tailored to the needs of Black adults, and a safe environment to address mental health concerns. Furthermore, it is critical to consider the role of racial discrimination and mental health stigma when designing inclusive and culturally sensitive DMH tools.

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来源期刊
JMIR Formative Research
JMIR Formative Research Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
579
审稿时长
12 weeks
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