Women Empowered to Connect With Addiction Resources and Engage in Evidence-Based Treatment (WE-CARE)-an mHealth Application for the Universal Screening of Alcohol, Substance Use, Depression, and Anxiety: Usability and Feasibility Study.

IF 2 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES JMIR Formative Research Pub Date : 2025-02-07 DOI:10.2196/62915
Krystyna Isaacs, Autumn Shifflett, Kajal Patel, Lacey Karpisek, Yi Cui, Maayan Lawental, Golfo Tzilos Wernette, Brian Borsari, Katie Chang, Tony Ma
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Abstract

Background: Women of childbearing age (aged 18-44 years) face multiple barriers to receiving screening and treatment for unhealthy alcohol and substance use, depression, and anxiety, including lack of screening in the primary care setting and lack of support in accessing care. The Women Empowered to Connect with Addiction Resources and Engage in Evidence-based Treatment (WE-CARE) mobile app was developed to test universal screening with women of childbearing age and linkage to care after an anonymous assessment.

Objective: In this study, we aimed to investigate the feasibility and acceptability of providing anonymous screening instruments through mobile phones for alcohol and substance use, as well as depression and anxiety, for women of childbearing age.

Methods: We used agile development principles based on previous formative research to test WE-CARE mobile health app with women of childbearing age (N=30) who resided in 1 of 6 counties in central Florida. WE-CARE included screening instruments (for alcohol, substance use, depression, and anxiety), a moderated discussion forum, educational microlearning videos, a frequently asked questions section, and resources for linkage to treatment. Individuals were recruited using flyers, academic listserves, and a commercial human subject recruiting company (Prolific). Upon completion of the screening instruments, women explored the educational and linkage to care features of the app and filled out a System Usability Scale to evaluate the mobile health app's usability and acceptability. Postpilot semistructured interviews (n=4) were conducted to further explore the women's reactions to the app.

Results: A total of 77 women downloaded the application and 30 completed testing. Women of childbearing age gave the WE-CARE app an excellent System Usability Scale score of 86.7 (SD 12.43). Our results indicate elevated risk for substance use in 18 of the 30 (60%) participants, 9/18 (50%) also had an elevated risk for anxiety or depression, and 11/18 (61%) had an elevated risk for substance use, anxiety, or depression. Participants reported that WE-CARE was easy to navigate and use but they would have liked to see more screening questions and more educational content. Linkage to care was an issue; however, as none of the women identified as "at-risk" for substance use disorders contacted the free treatment clinic for further evaluation.

Conclusions: The mobile health app was highly rated for acceptability and usability, but participants were not receptive to seeking help at a treatment center after only a few brief encounters with the app. The linkage to care design features was likely insufficient to encourage them to seek treatment. The next version of WE-CARE will include normative scores for participants to self-evaluate their screening status compared with their age- and gender-matched peers and enhanced linkages to care features. Future development will focus on enhancing engagement to improve change behaviors and assess readiness for change.

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女性有权与成瘾资源联系并参与循证治疗(WE-CARE)——用于酒精、物质使用、抑郁和焦虑普遍筛查的移动健康应用:可用性和可行性研究。
背景:育龄妇女(18-44岁)在接受不健康酒精和物质使用、抑郁和焦虑筛查和治疗方面面临多重障碍,包括初级保健机构缺乏筛查,以及在获得护理方面缺乏支持。开发了“有权与成瘾资源联系并参与循证治疗的妇女”(WE-CARE)移动应用程序,以测试对育龄妇女的普遍筛查以及匿名评估后与护理的联系。目的:在本研究中,我们旨在探讨通过手机为育龄妇女提供酒精和物质使用以及抑郁和焦虑的匿名筛查工具的可行性和可接受性。方法:基于以往的形成性研究,我们采用敏捷开发原则,对居住在佛罗里达州中部6个县中的1个县的育龄妇女(N=30)进行We - care移动健康应用程序测试。WE-CARE包括筛查工具(酒精、物质使用、抑郁和焦虑)、主持的讨论论坛、教育微学习视频、常见问题部分以及与治疗联系的资源。通过传单、学术名单和商业人类受试者招聘公司(多产)招募个人。在完成筛选工具后,女性探索了应用程序的教育和与护理的联系功能,并填写了系统可用性量表来评估移动健康应用程序的可用性和可接受性。试验后进行了半结构化访谈(n=4),以进一步探讨女性对应用程序的反应。结果:共有77名女性下载了应用程序,30名完成了测试。育龄妇女给WE-CARE应用程序的系统可用性评分为86.7(标准差12.43)。我们的研究结果表明,30名参与者中有18人(60%)的物质使用风险升高,9/18(50%)的焦虑或抑郁风险升高,11/18(61%)的物质使用、焦虑或抑郁风险升高。参与者报告说,WE-CARE很容易浏览和使用,但他们希望看到更多的筛选问题和更多的教育内容。与护理的联系是一个问题;然而,由于没有一个被确定为物质使用障碍“有风险”的妇女联系免费治疗诊所进行进一步评估。结论:移动健康应用程序在可接受性和可用性方面获得了很高的评价,但参与者在与应用程序短暂接触后,不愿意在治疗中心寻求帮助。与护理设计功能的联系可能不足以鼓励他们寻求治疗。下一个版本的WE-CARE将包括参与者自我评估与其年龄和性别匹配的同龄人相比的筛查状况的标准分数,并加强与护理特征的联系。未来的发展将侧重于加强参与,以改进变革行为和评估变革准备情况。
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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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