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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Mental Health

Date Submitted: Nov 25, 2020
Date Accepted: Oct 4, 2021

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

FOCUS mHealth Intervention for Veterans With Serious Mental Illness in an Outpatient Department of Veterans Affairs Setting: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Usability Study

Buck B, Nguyen J, Porter S, Ben-Zeev D, Reger GR

FOCUS mHealth Intervention for Veterans With Serious Mental Illness in an Outpatient Department of Veterans Affairs Setting: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Usability Study

JMIR Ment Health 2022;9(1):e26049

DOI: 10.2196/26049

PMID: 35089151

PMCID: 8838564

FOCUS mHealth intervention for veterans with serious mental illness in an outpatient VA setting: A pilot feasibility study

  • Benjamin Buck; 
  • Janelle Nguyen; 
  • Shelan Porter; 
  • Dror Ben-Zeev; 
  • Greg R. Reger

ABSTRACT

Background:

Veterans with serious mental illnesses (SMI) face barriers to accessing in-person evidence-based interventions that improve illness management. Mobile health (mHealth) has been demonstrated to be feasible, acceptable, effective, and engaging among individuals with serious mental illness in community mental health settings. mHealth for SMI has not been tested within the VA.

Objective:

The present study examined the feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effectiveness of an mHealth intervention for serious mental illness in the context of VA outpatient care.

Methods:

Seventeen (n = 17) veterans with serious mental illnesses enrolled in a one-month pilot trial of FOCUS, a smartphone-based self-management intervention for serious mental illness. At baseline and post-test they completed measures examining symptoms and functional recovery. Participants provided qualitative feedback related to the usability and acceptability of the intervention.

Results:

Veterans completed on average 85.00 (SD = 96.11) interactions with FOCUS over the one-month intervention period. They reported high satisfaction, usability, and acceptability, with nearly all (n = 16, 94.1%) participants reporting that they would recommend the intervention to a fellow veteran. Qualitative feedback indicated that veterans thought mHealth complemented their existing VA services well and described potential opportunities to adapt FOCUS to specific subpopulations (e.g. combat veterans) as well as specific delivery modalities (e.g. groups). In the one-month period, participants experienced small improvements in self-assessed recovery, auditory hallucinations and quality of life.

Conclusions:

The FOCUS mHealth intervention is feasible, acceptable, and usable among veterans. Future work should develop and examine VA-specific implementation approaches of FOCUS for this population.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Buck B, Nguyen J, Porter S, Ben-Zeev D, Reger GR

FOCUS mHealth Intervention for Veterans With Serious Mental Illness in an Outpatient Department of Veterans Affairs Setting: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Usability Study

JMIR Ment Health 2022;9(1):e26049

DOI: 10.2196/26049

PMID: 35089151

PMCID: 8838564

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