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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Formative Research

Date Submitted: Feb 28, 2021
Date Accepted: Nov 16, 2021

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

A Transdiagnostic, Emotion Regulation App (Eda) for Children: Design, Development, and Lessons Learned

Moltrecht B, Patalay P, Bear HA, Deighton J, Edbrooke-Childs J

A Transdiagnostic, Emotion Regulation App (Eda) for Children: Design, Development, and Lessons Learned

JMIR Form Res 2022;6(1):e28300

DOI: 10.2196/28300

PMID: 35044312

PMCID: 8811693

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Interdisciplinary Development of a Transdiagnostic Mobile App to Enhance Children’s Emotion Regulation: Sharing Insights and Lessons Learned

  • Bettina Moltrecht; 
  • Praveetha Patalay; 
  • Holly Alice Bear; 
  • Jessica Deighton; 
  • Julian Edbrooke-Childs

ABSTRACT

Background:

Digital interventions, including mobile apps represent promising means to provide effective mental health support to young people. Despite the increased availability of mental health apps, there is a significant gap for this age group, especially for younger children. Research investigating the effectiveness and development process of child mental health apps is limited, and the field faces persistent issues in relation to low user up-take and engagement, which is assumed to be a result of lacking interdisciplinary approaches.

Objective:

We present the development and design process of a new mental health app for children that targets their emotion regulation abilities. We describe the creation of a new interdisciplinary development framework, to guide the design process, and explain how each activity informed different app features.

Methods:

The first two stages of the framework employed a variety of methods, including: 1) classroom observations, 2) public-engagement events with the target group (N=21), 3) synthesis of the existing evidence as part of a meta-analysis, 4) a series of co-design and participatory workshops with young users (N=33), clinicians (N=7), researchers (N=12), app developers (N=1) , designers (N=2), and lastly 5) testing of the first high-tech prototype (N=15).

Results:

For the interdisciplinary framework we drew on methods derived from the medical research council framework for complex interventions, the patient-clinician-framework and Druin’s cooperative inquiry. The classroom observations, public-engagement events, and synthesis of the existing evidence informed the first key pillars of the app and wireframes. Subsequently, a series of workshops shaped and reshaped the content and app features, including games, psychoeducational films, and practice modules. Based on the prototype testing sessions we made further adjustments to improve the app.

Conclusions:

Although mobile apps could be highly suitable to support young people’s mental health on a wider scale, there is little guidance on how these interventions could be designed. The involvement of the different methods and especially the young users was very valuable. We hope that the interdisciplinary framework and multiple methods that we applied will be helpful to others who are also aiming to develop suitable apps for young people.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Moltrecht B, Patalay P, Bear HA, Deighton J, Edbrooke-Childs J

A Transdiagnostic, Emotion Regulation App (Eda) for Children: Design, Development, and Lessons Learned

JMIR Form Res 2022;6(1):e28300

DOI: 10.2196/28300

PMID: 35044312

PMCID: 8811693

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