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  3. Brief use of behavioral activation features predicts benefits of self-help app on depression symptoms: Secondary analysis of a selective prevention trial in young people.
 

Brief use of behavioral activation features predicts benefits of self-help app on depression symptoms: Secondary analysis of a selective prevention trial in young people.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/87419
Date of Publication
April 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institute of Psycholo...

Institut für Psycholo...

Author
Bralee, Emily
Mostazir, Mohammod
Warren, Fiona C
Newbold, Alexandra
Hulme, Claire
Cranston, Timothy
Aas, Benjamin
Bear, Holly
Botella, Cristina
Burkhardt, Felix
Ehring, Thomas
Fazel, Mina
Fontaine, Johnny R J
Frost, Mads
Garcia-Palacios, Azucena
Greimel, Ellen
Hößle, Christiane
Hovasapian, Arpine
Huyghe, Veerle E I
Iversen, Nanna
Karpouzis, Kostas
Löchner, Johanna
Molinari, Guadalupe
Pekrun, Reinhard
Platt, Belinda
Rosenkranz, Tabea
Scherer, Klaus R
Schlegel, Katja
Institut für Psychologie - Persönlichkeitspsychologie (Prof. Troche)
Institute of Psychology, Personality Psychology, Differential Psychology and Diagnostics
Schuller, Bjorn W
Schulte-Korne, Gerd
Suso-Ribera, Carlos
Voigt, Varinka
Voss, Maria
Watkins, Edward R
Subject(s)

100 - Philosophy::150...

Series
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1939-2117
0022-006X
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1037/ccp0000917
PubMed ID
40126557
Uncontrolled Keywords

young people

depression

smartphone app

cognitive behavioral ...

behavioral activation...

Description
Objective
To explore which cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) self-help app usage predicted depression during a selective prevention trial.
Method
A recent controlled trial (ECoWeB-PREVENT) randomized young people aged 16-22, at increased risk for depression because of elevated worry/rumination, negative appraisals, and/or rejection sensitivity but without past or current history of major depression, to apps that provided self-monitoring, self-monitoring plus CBT self-help, or self-monitoring plus emotional competency self-help. Self-help included coping strategies for moment-by-moment use (Tools) and self-learning/planning exercises (Challenges). On the primary outcome (depression, Patient Health Questionnaire-9 [PHQ-9]) at 3-months follow-up (primary endpoint), only the CBT app outperformed self-monitoring. In this secondary analysis, only data from participants who used the CBT or self-monitoring apps at least once were analyzed to test what app use predicted change in depression from baseline to 3 months.
Results
Of the original 1,262 participants (79% female), 558 were included (CBT, baseline, n = 273, PHQ-9: M = 7.48, SD = 3.9; 3 months, N = 163, PHQ-9: M = 8.83, SD = 4.92; self-monitoring, baseline, n = 285, PHQ-9: M = 7.45, SD = 4.26; 3 months, N = 183, PHQ-9: M = 7.48, SD = 3.9). Neither total app use, self-monitoring, nor use of Tools predicted change in depression (all ps > .05). Frequency of use of Challenges predicted lower depression symptoms and caseness at 3 months (β = -0.28, 95% CI [-0.53, -0.03], p = .029). Specifically, the use of behavioral activation challenges mediated the effects of the CBT app on depression over 3 months (β = -0.59, 95% CI [-1.13, -0.05], p = .03).
Conclusions
Brief psychoeducation about behavioral activation principles in an app may protect young people from depression over 3 months, even when only used once. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/208931
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2025-94075-003.pdftextAdobe PDF277.21 KBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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