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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: May 20, 2025
Date Accepted: Sep 15, 2025

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

Capacity to Invest Effort as a Predictor of Preference for Digital Mental Health Interventions Over Psychotherapy: Cross-Sectional Study Using an Ecological Digital Screening Tool

Savir T, Baumel A

Capacity to Invest Effort as a Predictor of Preference for Digital Mental Health Interventions Over Psychotherapy: Cross-Sectional Study Using an Ecological Digital Screening Tool

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e77802

DOI: 10.2196/77802

PMID: 41115289

PMCID: 12536998

Effort Capacity as a Predictor of Preference for Digital Mental Health Interventions Over Psychotherapy: Cross-Sectional Study Using an Ecological Digital Screening Tool

  • Tomer Savir; 
  • Amit Baumel

ABSTRACT

Background:

Research typically shows a higher preference for professionally-led face-to-face mental health interventions over digital ones. It remains unclear in which circumstances digital self-help tools are preferred. To address this gap, it is important to examine user characteristics that may help predict when digital interventions are more desirable, ultimately guiding their design to enhance engagement and appeal.

Objective:

To examine how distress severity and capacity to invest effort relate to intervention preferences, using an ecological assessment of individuals who seek to receive feedback on their mental health.

Methods:

A comprehensive digital mental health screening tool providing automated feedback was developed and advertised on social media. The sample comprised 684 adult participants aged 18-82 who opted to complete the screening to receive feedback on their mental health state. Participants completed questionnaires measuring general psychological distress, depression, generalized anxiety and demographics. Kessler Psychological Distress Scale–6 was used as the primary measure for distress. Participants were also presented with questions measuring capacity to invest effort and preferences for a professional vs digital self-help tools and for psychotherapy vs a mobile application. The effectiveness of distress, capacity to invest effort, and background characteristics in predicting preferences (a professional vs digital self-help tools; psychotherapy vs a mobile application) was examined using hierarchical linear regressions. The distributions of dichotomized preferences were plotted against distress and capacity to invest effort for transparent visualization.

Results:

A hierarchical linear regression found that distress, capacity to invest, and currently being in psychotherapy significantly predicted preference for a professional vs digital self-help tools. Distress (β=.25, 95% CI .18 to .32, P<.001) and capacity to invest effort (β=.23, 95% CI .16 to .30, P<.001) were the strongest predictors, with similar effect size. The model explained 20% of the variance in preference, with capacity to invest effort uniquely contributing 5%. Most distressed participants with low capacity (66.1%) preferred digital self-help tools, whereas most distressed participants with high capacity (60.5%) favored a professional. Similar results were obtained when using PHQ-4 as an alternative distress measure. Capacity to invest effort remained significant (β=.18, 95% CI .10 to .26, P<.001) when predicting a preference for psychotherapy vs a mobile application, while distress was not significant (β=-.03, 95% CI -.10 to .05, P=.51).

Conclusions:

This study highlights that the preference for digital interventions is driven by a reduced capacity to invest effort in an intervention. Attempts to reduce the mental health treatment gap through digital interventions should focus on optimizing the effort elicited by users to improve desirability and engagement.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Savir T, Baumel A

Capacity to Invest Effort as a Predictor of Preference for Digital Mental Health Interventions Over Psychotherapy: Cross-Sectional Study Using an Ecological Digital Screening Tool

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e77802

DOI: 10.2196/77802

PMID: 41115289

PMCID: 12536998

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