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The opportunity for e-mental health to overcome stigma and discrimination
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 August 2024
Abstract
Many with mental illness do not seek treatment, often due to stigma; be it public, self, or institutional type. To improve outcomes, stigma needs addressing.
Understand the opportunity for e-mental health to help overcome stigma and, to provide an expert opinion to foster its adoption.
We conducted literature searches using the terms ((mental health) AND ((stigma) OR (discrimination))) AND (((((digital tools) OR (digital services)) OR (healthcare apps)) OR (digital solutions)) OR (digital technology)), limited to 2007 – 2023, identifying 223 citations, 9 of which were relevant for this evaluation, including 4 systematic reviews (Table 1).
Literature reports suggest that e-mental health may be useful for addressing stigma and reducing the treatment gap. While it was not consistently as good as face-to-face services, e-mental health tools were frequently shown to be effective in reducing stigma, improving mental health literacy, and increasing help-seeking behaviors. Tools included web-based breathing, meditation, and CBT; suicide prevention apps; and online videos and games. Experts from a 2022 global Think Tank session convened by eMHIC, opined and emphasised that embracing e-mental health must not leave people behind nor reinforce inequality and that structural barriers must first be acknowledged and overcome. Creating a shared understanding of the challenge and of terminology is essential, as is codesigning any solution together with people with lived experience.Table 1.
Systematic literature reviews
Study | Interventions | Findings |
---|---|---|
SLR + meta-analysis, 9 studies, n=1916 (Goh et al. Int J Ment Health Nu 2021;30:1040–1056) |
|
- Breath2Relax
- Headspace
- Meditation Audios
- MoodGYM
- Stress Gym
- Virtual Hope Box
- Stay Alive
- Web-based, psychoeducation interventions
- Online games
- Mobile app
- Video games
- Virtual reality
- Videoconferencing and online chat
Published data suggest that e-mental health is promising to reduce stigma and discrimination, with the potential to foster help-seeking and treatment engagement. Adoption requires attention to derailers and must foster inclusivity. There is an imperative to adopt e-mental health, especially evidence-based solutions.
K. Subramaniam Employee of: Employee of Viatris, A. Greenshaw: None Declared, A. Thapliyal: None Declared
- Type
- Abstract
- Information
- European Psychiatry , Volume 67 , Special Issue S1: Abstracts of the 32nd European Congress of Psychiatry , April 2024 , pp. S549 - S550
- Creative Commons
- This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
- Copyright
- © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of European Psychiatric Association
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