Evaluation of MoodRing on Improving the Quality of Depression Management in Adolescents
- Conditions
- Depression in Adolescence
- Interventions
- Device: MoodRing AppOther: Usual Care
- Registration Number
- NCT05376358
- Lead Sponsor
- Ana Radovic
- Brief Summary
The MoodRing intervention is a mobile application for adolescents, parents, and an accompanying web-based clinician portal which enables adolescents to monitor their mood through the use of passively collected smartphone data. This randomized controlled trial will evaluate whether MoodRing as compared to usual care improves the quality of depression management.
- Detailed Description
This is a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of MoodRing as compared to usual care for adolescents who have a prior diagnosis of depression. Adolescents with depressive symptoms, their parents, and their mental healthcare providers (if interested) will participate in a 6 month study. Adolescents age 12-18 and their parent will be consented for the study and be sent an online survey to obtain baseline measures. Those who complete the baseline measures will then be randomized to receive the MoodRing intervention or treatment as usual. Adolescents and parents will be asked to complete data collection at 3 months and 6 month time points post-randomization by online survey. Additionally, data will be collected for 3 and 6 month timepoints via the adolescent's electronic health record data. At 6 months, online surveys will be sent and an invitation to interview for patients' mental healthcare providers who consent to participate in the study.
Adolescent-parent dyads will be randomized at a 1:1 ratio (using randomized block sizes) to either 1) MoodRing or 2) usual care. 100 adolescent-parent dyads (200 total individuals) will be randomized to MoodRing and 100 adolescent-parent dyads (200 total individuals) will be randomized to usual care. We expect 50 clinicians will participate. In both arms, passively collected data will be obtained from adolescent smartphones as well as weekly mood surveys and monthly sleep surveys. In the 1) MoodRing arm adolescents will download the MoodRing-adolescent app, parents will download the MoodRing-parent app, and healthcare providers if interested will have access to a clinician dashboard. The randomization tables will be generated by the study statistician.
The investigators hypothesize that adolescents who receive MoodRing as compared to usual care will have:
H1: Improved self-management of depression as measured by change of baseline for the average score on the Partners in Health Scale
EH2: The investigators will also explore whether MoodRing as compared to usual care will result in improved quality of depression management as measured by frequency of symptom reassessment, medication adherence, and therapy adherence, less healthcare utilization, decreased depression symptoms, improved sleep quality, and increased application of self-management activities through increased self-efficacy, utilization of self-management skills and knowledge and social support.
H3: The investigators anticipate healthcare providers, adolescents, and parents will report satisfaction with use of MoodRing.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 146
Adolescent:
- age 12 -18
- prior or present history of depression per self-report and/or clinician diagnosis
- scores between 5 or higher on PHQ-9 consistent with at least mild symptoms of depression
- read and understand English
- has an Android or iOS smartphone compatible with AWARE mobile application and access to a smartphone data plan
- currently in United States
Parent/Guardian:
- adolescent qualifies for study and assents to enroll
- understands English
- currently in United States
- has a smartphone device that can download the intervention application
Healthcare Provider:
- involved in providing mental health treatment (psychotherapy or antidepressant prescribing or making referrals) to adolescent participant - can be a primary care provider, therapist, subspecialist, psychiatrist
Adolescent:
- currently actively suicidal (have suicidal thoughts and plan with an intent to act on it)
- plans to travel to countries belonging to the European Union (Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, The Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden), the United Kingdom (England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland), Norway, Iceland, or Lichtenstein in the next 6 months for more than 2 weeks at a time
Parent:
- If their adolescent child is excluded
Healthcare Provider:
- None
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description MoodRing MoodRing App Adolescent participants in this arm will download two mobile applications - a data collection non-interactive app to collect passive sensing data (AWARE) and the MoodRing (MR) mobile application with which they can visualize their data about their mood, sleep, activity, enter their own mood score, and access psychoeducational resources including links to a research-based website, SOVA. Their parents will download a parent MoodRing application which provides them with parenting resources and articles and a weekly report of their adolescents' mood as predicted by passive sensing. Clinical providers will receive access to a web portal where they can view their adolescent patients' data who are enrolled in the study. Usual Care Usual Care Participants in this arm will receive no intervention and access treatment as usual per their mental health services provider. A mobile application (AWARE) which is not interactive and is only for purposes of data collection will be downloaded on the adolescents' smartphone.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change from Baseline in Self-management at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Adolescents will be asked the Partners in Health Scale The revised Partners in Health Scale (Smith 2016) assesses self-management with respect to a chronic condition, with regard to active involvement of a patient in managing their condition. Total scores range from 0 to 96 with higher scores indicating worse self-management.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Quality of Depression Management: Depression Symptom Reassessment change from baseline 6 months Attendance at a healthcare provider visit for depression symptom reassessment within the past 3 months (yes/no) measured by adolescent, parent self-report and electronic health record review (yes if any are yes, no if all are no). The metric reported will be percentage of individuals per study arm with a 'yes' result.
Quality of Depression Management: Medication Adherence 3 months Out of adolescents who are taking an antidepressant, receipt of at least 60 consecutive days (yes/no) measured by adolescent, parent self-report and electronic health record review (yes if any are yes, no if all are no). The metric reported will be percentage of individuals per study arm with a 'yes' result.
Change from Baseline in Self-Efficacy at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Adolescents will be asked the Mental Health Self-efficacy Scale (MHSES) The Mental Health Self-efficacy Scale (Clarke, 2014) measures one's belief in one's capability to perform mental health self-care behaviors. The score ranges from 6 to 60, with higher scores indicating higher confidence in mental health selfcare.
Change from Baseline in Perceived Severity at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Rating scale of General Mental Health A rating scale of General Mental Health (Cadigan, 2018) will be used with two questions each ranging from 1 to 5 with regard to a self-rating of general mental health. Adolescents will be asked this and parents about their perception of their adolescent's mental health.
Change from Baseline in Self-management at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Adolescents will be asked the Partners in Health Scale The revised Partners in Health Scale (Smith 2016) assesses self-management with respect to a chronic condition, with regard to active involvement of a patient in managing their condition. Total scores range from 0 to 96 with higher scores indicating worse self-management.
Quality of Depression Management: Therapy Adherence 3 months Out of adolescents who are referred for psychotherapy, receipt of at least 3 sessions within 3 months (yes/no) measured by adolescent, parent self-report and electronic health record review (yes if any are yes, no if all are no). The metric reported will be percentage of individuals per study arm with a 'yes' result.
Change from Baseline in Depression Severity at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Adolescents will be asked the PHQ-9 Patient Health Questionnaire-9 measures depression severity with a score ranging from 0 to 27, a higher score indicating greater severity.
Change from Baseline in Social Support at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Adolescents will be asked the Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Survey The Medical Outcome Study Social Support Scale (Sherbourne, 1991) measures types of social support. This subscale ranges from 0-100, with higher levels associated with greater support.
Change from Baseline in Sleep Disturbance at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Adolescents will respond to the PROMIS Pediatric Sleep Disturbance scale. This scale has four questions, the second (sleeping through the night) being reverse-scored, with response options of never, almost never, sometimes, almost always, and always, ranges from 4 to 20 with higher scores indicating higher levels of sleep disturbance.
Ongoing Change in Sleep Disturbance monthly up to 6 months Adolescents will respond to the PROMIS Pediatric Sleep Disturbance scale. This scale has four questions, the second (sleeping through the night) being reverse-scored, with response options of never, almost never, sometimes, almost always, and always, ranges from 4 to 20 with higher scores indicating higher levels of sleep disturbance.
Change from Baseline in Sleep Habits at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Adolescents will respond to the School Based Sleep Habits Survey-Child Form which asks 43 questions about weekday and weeknight sleep patterns, sleep awakenings, and sleep time preferences.
Healthcare Utilization for acute care or primary care (for non mental-health reason) 6 month Number of visits for (combined total between adolescent self-report, parent self-report, and electronic health-record review):
1. urgent care;
2. emergency room;
3. inpatient hospitalization;
4. acute primary care provider visit for non-mental health related concern;
5. medical or surgical subspecialist visitChange from Baseline in Self-management behavior at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Adolescents will be asked Question 11 of Partners in Health Scale; and the average amount of time (Daily, More than once a week, Once a week, Once a month, Once a semester, Once a year, Less than once a year, Never) spent in potentially useful self-management activities: (1) created to-do lists to help me focus; (2) found strategies to create pleasurable distractions; (3) engaged in some physical activity (cycling, walking, etc.); (4) set realistic short-term goals; (5) made sure I had a good day/night routine with got enough sleep; (6) ensured enough rest to avoid getting exhausted; (7) left the house regularly; (8) ate healthy
Change from Baseline in Self-management behavior at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Adolescents will be asked Question 11 of Partners in Health Scale; and the average amount of time (Daily, More than once a week, Once a week, Once a month, Once a semester, Once a year, Less than once a year, Never) spent in potentially useful self-management activities: (1) created to-do lists to help me focus; (2) found strategies to create pleasurable distractions; (3) engaged in some physical activity (cycling, walking, etc.); (4) set realistic short-term goals; (5) made sure I had a good day/night routine with got enough sleep; (6) ensured enough rest to avoid getting exhausted; (7) left the house regularly; (8) ate healthy
Change from Baseline in Social Support at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Adolescents will be asked the Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Survey The Medical Outcome Study Social Support Scale (Sherbourne, 1991) measures types of social support. This subscale ranges from 0-100, with higher levels associated with greater support.
Change from Baseline in Sleep Disturbance at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Adolescents will respond to the PROMIS Pediatric Sleep Disturbance scale. This scale has four questions, the second (sleeping through the night) being reverse-scored, with response options of never, almost never, sometimes, almost always, and always, ranges from 4 to 20 with higher scores indicating higher levels of sleep disturbance.
Change from Baseline in Perceived Need for Service Use at 3 months From baseline to 3 months The General-practice Users Perceived-need Inventory (GUPI) The General-Practice Users Perceived-Need Inventory (McNab, 2004) will be used to measure perceived need for treatment. There is no scoring. Adolescents will be asked this and parents about their perception of their adolescent's need for mental health services. The response will be evaluated by the total number of individuals who agree that they would like to or are already getting help with a) medication and b) counseling as comapred to those who respond they do not need this kind of help.
Change from Baseline in Depression Severity at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Adolescents will be asked the PHQ-9 Patient Health Questionnaire-9 measures depression severity with a score ranging from 0 to 27, a higher score indicating greater severity.
Change from Baseline in Self-Efficacy at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Adolescents will be asked the Mental Health Self-efficacy Scale (MHSES) The Mental Health Self-efficacy Scale (Clarke, 2014) measures one's belief in one's capability to perform mental health self-care behaviors. The score ranges from 6 to 60, with higher scores indicating higher confidence in mental health selfcare.
Change from Baseline in Sleep-Related Impairment at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Adolescents will respond to the PROMIS Pediatric Sleep-Related Impairment scale. This scale has four questions with response options of never, almost never, sometimes, almost always, and always, ranges from 4 to 19 with higher scores indicating higher levels of sleep-related impairment.
Change from Baseline in Sleep-Related Impairment at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Adolescents will respond to the PROMIS Pediatric Sleep-Related Impairment scale. This scale has four questions with response options of never, almost never, sometimes, almost always, and always, ranges from 4 to 19 with higher scores indicating higher levels of sleep-related impairment.
Ongoing Change in Sleep-Related Impairment monthly up to 6 months Adolescents will respond to the PROMIS Pediatric Sleep-Related Impairment scale. This scale has four questions with response options of never, almost never, sometimes, almost always, and always, ranges from 4 to 19 with higher scores indicating higher levels of sleep-related impairment.
Change from Baseline in Sleep Habits at 3 months From baseline to 3 months Adolescents will respond to the School Based Sleep Habits Survey-Child Form which asks 43 questions about weekday and weeknight sleep patterns, sleep awakenings, and sleep time preferences.
Ongoing Change in Sleep Habits monthly up to 6 months Adolescents will respond to the School Based Sleep Habits Survey-Child Form which asks 43 questions about weekday and weeknight sleep patterns, sleep awakenings, and sleep time preferences.
Change from Baseline in Perceived Severity at 6 months From baseline to 6 months Rating scale of General Mental Health A rating scale of General Mental Health (Cadigan, 2018) will be used with two questions each ranging from 1 to 5 with regard to a self-rating of general mental health. Adolescents will be asked this and parents about their perception of their adolescent's mental health.
Quality of Depression Management: Depression Symptom Reassessment 3 months Attendance at a healthcare provider visit for depression symptom reassessment within 3 months (yes/no) measured by adolescent, parent self-report and electronic health record review (yes if any are yes, no if all are no). The metric reported will be percentage of individuals per study arm with a 'yes' result.
Change from Baseline in Perceived Need for Service Use at 6 months From baseline to 6 months The General-practice Users Perceived-need Inventory (GUPI) The General-Practice Users Perceived-Need Inventory (McNab, 2004) will be used to measure perceived need for treatment. There is no scoring. Adolescents will be asked this and parents about their perception of their adolescent's need for mental health services. The response will be evaluated by the total number of individuals who agree that they would like to or are already getting help with a) medication and b) counseling as comapred to those who respond they do not need this kind of help.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Center for Adolescent and Young Adult Health
🇺🇸Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States