探索远程治疗应用程序的用户视角和道德体验:用户评论的定性分析。

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Jmir Mental Health Pub Date : 2023-09-22 DOI:10.2196/49684
Eunkyung Jo, Whitney-Jocelyn Kouaho, Stephen M Schueller, Daniel A Epstein
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:远程治疗应用程序已成为传统住院治疗的一种很有前途的替代方案,尤其是在新冠肺炎大流行之后,因为它们有助于克服获得护理的一系列地理和情感障碍。然而,远程治疗应用程序的快速普及是在一个发展速度超过了该领域各种监管和道德考虑的环境中发生的。因此,鉴于缺乏监管和监督,研究人员对远程治疗应用程序的道德影响和潜在风险表示担忧。远程治疗应用程序的不同目的是更直接地复制传统护理的实践,而心理健康应用程序主要提供补充支持,这表明有必要从现有提供治疗的道德准则的角度来审视远程治疗应用的道德考虑。目的:在这项研究中,我们检查了商业远程治疗应用程序的用户评论,以了解用户对是否以及如何遵守和纳入道德原则的看法。方法:我们确定了8个移动应用程序,它们(1)在2个主要的移动应用程序商店(Google Play和Apple app Store)上提供远程治疗,(2)在这两个应用程序商店上都收到了超过5000条应用程序评论。我们编写了Python脚本(Python软件基金会),从8个应用程序中收集用户评论,在2个应用商店中收集了3268条用户评论。我们使用主题分析来定性分析用户评论,根据心理学家、精神病学家和社会工作者的道德行为准则开发了一本代码簿。结果:用户评论的定性分析揭示了远程治疗应用程序用户的道德问题和机会。用户经常认为他们的远程治疗师不专业,提到他们的治疗师不听他们的话,在治疗过程中分心,也没有赴约。用户还注意到远程治疗应用程序存在技术故障和治疗师不可用,这可能会影响他们提供连续护理的能力。用户对这些应用程序的可负担性持有不同意见,有些人认为它们是可负担的,有些人则不然。用户进一步提出订阅模式导致定价不公平,并对缺乏成本透明度表示担忧。用户认为,这些应用程序可以通过克服地理和社会限制,帮助促进获得护理。结论:我们的研究表明,用户认为商业远程治疗应用程序遵守了许多与治疗相关的道德原则,但在专业性、护理连续性、成本公平性和成本透明度等关键领域存在不足。我们的研究结果表明,为了提供高质量的护理,远程治疗应用程序应优先考虑治疗师的公平薪酬,开发更灵活、透明的支付模式,并投资于确保应用程序稳定性和治疗师可用性的措施。未来需要制定远程治疗标准,提高这些服务的质量和可及性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Exploring User Perspectives of and Ethical Experiences With Teletherapy Apps: Qualitative Analysis of User Reviews.

Background: Teletherapy apps have emerged as a promising alternative to traditional in-person therapy, especially after the COVID-19 pandemic, as they help overcome a range of geographical and emotional barriers to accessing care. However, the rapid proliferation of teletherapy apps has occurred in an environment in which development has outpaced the various regulatory and ethical considerations of this space. Thus, researchers have raised concerns about the ethical implications and potential risks of teletherapy apps given the lack of regulation and oversight. Teletherapy apps have distinct aims to more directly replicate practices of traditional care, as opposed to mental health apps, which primarily provide supplemental support, suggesting a need to examine the ethical considerations of teletherapy apps from the lens of existing ethical guidelines for providing therapy.

Objective: In this study, we examined user reviews of commercial teletherapy apps to understand user perceptions of whether and how ethical principles are followed and incorporated.

Methods: We identified 8 mobile apps that (1) provided teletherapy on 2 dominant mobile app stores (Google Play and Apple App Store) and (2) had received >5000 app reviews on both app stores. We wrote Python scripts (Python Software Foundation) to scrape user reviews from the 8 apps, collecting 3268 user reviews combined across 2 app stores. We used thematic analysis to qualitatively analyze user reviews, developing a codebook drawing from the ethical codes of conduct for psychologists, psychiatrists, and social workers.

Results: The qualitative analysis of user reviews revealed the ethical concerns and opportunities of teletherapy app users. Users frequently perceived unprofessionalism in their teletherapists, mentioning that their therapists did not listen to them, were distracted during therapy sessions, and did not keep their appointments. Users also noted technical glitches and therapist unavailability on teletherapy apps that might affect their ability to provide continuity of care. Users held varied opinions on the affordability of those apps, with some perceiving them as affordable and others not. Users further brought up that the subscription model resulted in unfair pricing and expressed concerns about the lack of cost transparency. Users perceived that these apps could help promote access to care by overcoming geographical and social constraints.

Conclusions: Our study suggests that users perceive commercial teletherapy apps as adhering to many ethical principles pertaining to therapy but falling short in key areas regarding professionalism, continuity of care, cost fairness, and cost transparency. Our findings suggest that, to provide high-quality care, teletherapy apps should prioritize fair compensation for therapists, develop more flexible and transparent payment models, and invest in measures to ensure app stability and therapist availability. Future work is needed to develop standards for teletherapy and improve the quality and accessibility of those services.

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来源期刊
Jmir Mental Health
Jmir Mental Health Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
10.80
自引率
3.80%
发文量
104
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR Mental Health (JMH, ISSN 2368-7959) is a PubMed-indexed, peer-reviewed sister journal of JMIR, the leading eHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175). JMIR Mental Health focusses on digital health and Internet interventions, technologies and electronic innovations (software and hardware) for mental health, addictions, online counselling and behaviour change. This includes formative evaluation and system descriptions, theoretical papers, review papers, viewpoint/vision papers, and rigorous evaluations.
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