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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Mental Health

Date Submitted: May 7, 2025
Date Accepted: Aug 29, 2025

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

Digital Conversational Agents for the Mental Health of Treatment-Seeking Youth: Scoping Review

Hawke L, Hou J, Nguyen AT, Phi T, Gibson J, Ritchie B, Strudwick G, Rodak T, Gallagher L

Digital Conversational Agents for the Mental Health of Treatment-Seeking Youth: Scoping Review

JMIR Ment Health 2025;12:e77098

DOI: 10.2196/77098

PMID: 41202292

PMCID: 12639337

Digital conversational agents for the mental health of treatment-seeking youth: A scoping review

  • Lisa Hawke; 
  • Jingyi Hou; 
  • Anh T.P. Nguyen; 
  • Thalia Phi; 
  • Jamie Gibson; 
  • Brian Ritchie; 
  • Gillian Strudwick; 
  • Terri Rodak; 
  • Louise Gallagher

ABSTRACT

Background:

Digital conversational agents (or ‘chatbots’) that can generate human-like conversations have recently been adapted as a means of administering mental health interventions. However, their development for youth seeking mental health services requires further investigation.

Objective:

This youth-engaged scoping review synthesizes the recent research on digital conversational agents for youth seeking mental health or substance use services.

Methods:

Studies were included if they were published between 2016 and 2025 and examined digital conversational agents for youth aged 11 to 24 with mental health or substance use challenges in clinical settings. Systematic literature searchers were conducted in February 2024 in multiple databases and updated in March 2025. Data were extracted using co-developed forms and synthesized narratively.

Results:

Ten studies were included, all focusing on mental health. Seven examined the acceptability and feasibility of digital conversational agents; others explored youth perceptions of use, design, and content, with some exploration of impact on mental health symptoms. Most studies reported high acceptability and positive perceptions. Three were randomized controlled trials that found potential reductions in depressive symptoms. Reporting on the ethical standards was limited.

Conclusions:

Literature on chatbots for treatment-seeking youth is emerging, but limited. Future research should prioritize data security, safety measures, and youth co-design in the development of safe, engaging, digital conversational agents for youth with mental health conditions.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Hawke L, Hou J, Nguyen AT, Phi T, Gibson J, Ritchie B, Strudwick G, Rodak T, Gallagher L

Digital Conversational Agents for the Mental Health of Treatment-Seeking Youth: Scoping Review

JMIR Ment Health 2025;12:e77098

DOI: 10.2196/77098

PMID: 41202292

PMCID: 12639337

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