About this Research Topic
This Research Topic aims to explore implementation of mHealth related to mental wellbeing, factors affecting mental wellbeing such as emotion regulation, psychiatric symptoms, and cognition. Our main interest is to identify implementation best practices in order to inform organizational decision making in selecting and implementing proper mHealth tools in order to improve access and efficacy of support and psychiatric care. Special emphasis will be given to work being done to implement these solutions among those populations who otherwise have access barriers to psychiatric services, work comparing traditional treatment to treatment complemented by mHealth tools, comparison of different mHealth tools, user experience, ethical aspects and cost-effectiveness of interventions. We are also interested in solutions that have applicability for COVID-19 response.
• Description of methods and process of participatory development (with stakeholders, patients, family members, industrial partners)
• Validation and evaluation of efficacy and cost of specific interventions
• Tools and methods to measure user experience and integrate that to the process of development
• Comparison of different mHealth tools
• Applications using learning health care solutions models
• Processes of integration of mHealth tools to traditional services
• Cost-effectiveness
• Solutions suitable for areas with slow networks and low technological capacity
• Ethical issues
• Cultural safety, diversity and social factors affecting content of applications and implementation
• Studies comparing implementation models and techniques
• Besides clinical trials, we welcome qualitative work, systematic reviews and evidence-driven expert commentaries that critically assess the present state of research to predict and advise on future directions.
Keywords: mHealth, Digital Health, Wellbeing, Psychoeducation, Mobile applications, Virtual Reality
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.