Accepted for/Published in: JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Date Submitted: Jan 31, 2025
Date Accepted: Apr 22, 2026
Acceptability, feasibility, and outcome responsiveness of the Joint Effort mobile app for promoting lower-risk cannabis use among young adults: a pilot randomized controlled trial
ABSTRACT
Background:
Cannabis use (CU) among young adults continues to be an important public health issue. Interventions to support lower-risk CU during young adulthood can improve health outcomes. Mobile applications constitute a promising mode of service delivery. However, there is a lack of evidence-based apps specifically developed for young adult cannabis users.
Objective:
The current study aimed to evaluate the acceptability of a novel mobile app intervention (Joint Effort) and to assess the feasibility and outcome responsiveness of the study procedures used.
Methods:
A pilot study with a parallel-group randomized trial design was conducted with Canadian-based university students aged 18¬–30 reporting using cannabis ≥1 day in the past month. Participants were randomly assigned on a 1:1 ratio to either an experimental group (EG) involving the use of the Joint Effort mobile app or to a control group (CG) involving a web-based brief normative feedback message. The Joint Effort mobile app was designed to support CU self-management. This theory-informed behavior change intervention aims to reinforce the use of protective behavioral strategies (PBS) by targeting intention, attitude, social-norms and self-efficacy. The app’s acceptability was assessed via uptake, engagement, and appreciation. The feasibility of study procedures was assessed via online recruitment time, recruitment rate, and attrition rate. Outcome responsiveness was informed by participant-reported outcomes: CU frequency, intention to take action on CU, PBS use, severity of dependence, and psychological distress. All data were collected using a web-based survey at baseline, one-month (T1) and two-month (T2) post-baseline. Descriptive analyses were carried out on all outcomes.
Results:
The recruitment period lasted 124 days, and the recruitment rate was 55.6%. The final dataset analyzed included 80 participants (39 in EG and in 41 CG). Mean age was 23.4 years (standard deviation (SD) = 2.57) and 66% self-identified as women. Study attrition was 17.5% (14/80). User uptake of the Joint Effort app (i.e. proportion of participants in the EG who downloaded the app) was estimated at 59% (23/39) and the average time spent on it per participant was 8.2 minutes (SD = 7.3; median = 7.5, interquartile range = 5.7). The app obtained a mean total score on the User Engagement Scale - Short Form (UES-SF) of 3.81/5 (SD = 0.46) and a mean app quality total score of 4.20/5 on the end-user version of the Mobile App Rating Scale (uMARS). The proportion of participants who reported daily CU in the past month decreased from 12.8% at baseline to 4.2% at T2 in the EG and from 7.3% to 5.6% in the CG.
Conclusions:
Joint Effort appears to be a promising, acceptable, and scalable mobile app to help young adult cannabis users who wish to better manage their CU. Findings should inform future randomized controlled trials to assess the efficacy of this mobile-based intervention for cannabis users. Clinical Trial: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05099016
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