Many new digital psychiatry solutions have attracted funding in recent years, and experts have questions about how helpful or harmful they will be. Illustration by Emily Lankiewicz / Public Domain
Imagine youre in a room with a hundred American young adults, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed. Over their lifetimes, about 25 of them will have a stroke; 40 will get cancer. And an astounding half the room will develop a mental illness, if they havent done so already.
The United States mental health epidemic has been simmering for decades, with Covid-19 both illuminating and exacerbating the crisis. Given the social isolation, job insecurity and weakened support systems over the past few years, the World Health Organization estimated a 25 percent increase in anxiety and depression worldwide, with women and young people worst hit.
A large part of the challenge are the cavernous gaps in care: 158 million Americans live in an area with a shortage of mental health workers. And while the rise of telehealth and creation of the 988 suicide and crisis lifeline have helped, they are only Band-Aids, barely holding together a system failing at its seams. Were at a point in the U.S. where it almost couldnt get worse, says Kenneth Pages, a Florida doctor and former chief of psychiatry at Tampa General Hospital. Describe worse to me at this point.
Daunting as they may be, these challenges have inspired a new wave of digital psychiatry solutions, offering automated promise where humans have fallen short. Largely developed by computer scientists and consumer tech entrepreneurs, the new field leverages smartphones and wearable sensors to provide mental health insights, attracting more than $10 billion in funding worldwide between 2020 and 2022, according to technology market intelligence firm CB Insights. John Torous, director of the Digital Psychiatry Division at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, argues that the mental health crisis were all talking about really requires more transformative solutions.
Left open are broad questions over this nascent field and the trend toward shifting health care into a digital-first field. What does it mean to remove humans from something as fundamentally interpersonal as our mental health? And is digital psychiatry worth all the hype?
When you first consider digital psychiatry, you might think about the laundry list of apps ready to download on your smartphone: Calm, Headspace, Sanvello, Bearable, Happify and many others with similarly cheery names. These apps are personal assistants of sorts, helping users engage in guided meditations, mindfulness exercises, anxiety management and other activities, with customized wellness plans based on user preferences and lifestyles. While most of these apps offer free versions, accessing the full range of contentparticularly the personalized toolsrequires subscriptions ranging between $27.99 to $350 per year.
These companies advertise slogans like Become the architect of your health, and they say that Youll be surprised at how soon youll start feeling a positive change, but they are also quick to note that the apps are not meant for clinical use. We are not a health care or medical device provider, nor should our products be considered medical advice, Headspace emphasizes, before adding that its app makes no claims, representations or guarantees that the Products provide a physical or therapeutic benefit. Most others offer similar disclaimers.
That being said, some of these apps can be helpful. Recent data from nonclinical participants suggest that Calm and Headspace offer modest improvements across mindfulness, well-being, stress, anxiety and depression. Clinical psychologist Vara Saripalli says a lot of her patients already use these apps, and she even recommends some of them for patients who are anxious or want practice sorting through their thoughts and feelings. As an adjunct where your provider is checking in about your use of one of these tools, she continues, that can be helpful.
Beyond the consumer-facing apps, firms also offer software to help clinicians better care for their patients. The TrakStar platform, for instance, helps clinicians manage transcranial magnetic stimulation, an FDA-approved therapy for major depressive disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, migraines and smoking addiction. More specifically, TrakStar helps determine patient eligibility and insurance coverage, tracks patient-reported outcomes during treatment to assess efficacy and adverse events, and continues to monitor patients post-treatment through questionnaires in case they relapse. The platform notifies a provider if a patient gets worse so the provider can reengage with the patient.
Many of our patients waited until they completely crashed into a deep depression in order to seek help, even if they had previously recovered, says Cory Anderson, the companys vice president of clinical affairs and medical operations. What TrakStar is doing is monitoring these patients after their treatment to make sure they dont crash. He calls it an early warning system, with the ultimate goal being to expand health care capacity. In Andersons ideal world, mental health providers could quickly divert their attention to patients experiencing severe crises rather than being spread thin across all patients.
This mission to use digital tools to augment professional care is shared by academic researchers. Beth Israels Torous, for instance, invented MindLAMP, a digital psychiatry platform that collects info on sleep patterns, physical activities, physiological symptoms and call and text logs to offer patients customized mindfulness, meditation and breathing interventions. Although the app can take in data across wearable technology, surveys and GPS tracking, Torous emphasizes that clinicians and patients collaboratively decide which particular data streams to collect and then interpret them together in the clinic. We built it to be a more customizable, flexible way to use smartphones to augment care, Torous says.
So far, this approach appears promising: Across India, China, Australia, Canada and the U.S., MindLAMP has been used to digitally provide therapy to patients with schizophrenia, track memory loss in patients with Alzheimers, and understand differences in the disease trajectories of bipolar disorder and depression. If we can, in the future, start using algorithmsones that are evidence-basedI think we can begin to offer people a lot more responsiveness and features on LAMP to help them feel better quicker, says Torous.
Right now, MindLAMP is run by a research protocol without any investors, and there are no plans currently to spin the platform out into a business. Wed like to keep it as a common tool that people can use, Torous continues. They can do replicable science in this spacethey can add to it, augment it. He wants to provide a free platform for other researchers to validate and build off, in a field sometimes devoid of data-driven solutions.
Like Torous, Paola Pedrelli, associate director of the Depression Clinical and Research Program at Massachusetts General Hospital, and Judith Law, CEO of Anxiety Canada, value these types of academia-led innovations in digital psychiatry. For the past seven years, Pedrelli has been working with Rosalind Picard at MIT to develop machine learning algorithms that detect the severity of depressive symptoms among patients. And since 2012, Law has been collaborating with Mayo Clinic, University of British Columbia, University of Waterloo and other institutions on MindShift CBT, an anxiety management coaching app. Based on cognitive behavioral therapy, the goal is to challenge patients thoughts, beliefs and attitudes to improve their emotional well-being.
Pedrelli hopes that eventually, by collecting heart rate, sweat gland activity, temperature and movement from wearables, she and Picard will be able to prioritize patients experiencing acute relapses and proactively modify treatments before they fall into a deep depression. But in the meantime, MindShift CBT doesnt collect physiological data and instead contains modules to educate users on anxiety and engage them in skill-building exercises to support coping. A distinctive aspect of this free app is its community forum where users can learn from others experiences in a moderated space, providing and receiving peer-to-peer support. According to Lance Rappaport, a clinical psychologist at the University of Windsor and senior author of an upcoming study on MindShift CBT, anxiety, depressive symptoms and functional impairment decreased and quality of life increased among a cohort of more than 200 people who used the app for 16 weeks.
For digital psychiatry to succeed, Law says, the field will need to build its evidence base, actually proving that these tools have a clinical benefit in users. And if they dont, regulators may need to step in and hold companies accountable to produce the evidence. If Calm, Headspace and all these other products, ultimately, are more interested in the evidence base versus profitability, then I think were headed in the right direction, says Law.
Unfortunately, with billions of dollars of investor funding, some companies have tested ethical and legal boundaries in how they offer patient care. The platform Koko recently admitted to using artificial intelligence chatbots in place of humans to provide emotional support to customers without their consent. And last year, mental health telemedicine company Cerebral was placed under investigation by the Department of Justice for overprescribing the controlled substances Adderall and Xanax without requiring in-person evaluations. Companies that are for-profit are going to cut corners, says Saripalli. Im really concerned about the lack of quality of care that is going to proliferate the more these apps proliferate.
Vanderbilt Universitys Bradley Malin, an expert in biomedical informatics, offers similar concerns: With VC support behind it, theres this push toward quick return as fast as possiblegrow, grow, grow. With around 20,000 mental health apps currently available on the marketplace, ensuring these technologies are validated and demonstrate tangible benefit is thus of utmost importance. And doing this properly requires a lot of data collection, independent studies and replicated results.
But how much data is too much? Malin says, Its this push forward toward, We dont know what were looking for. And therefore, were just going to blitz it and collect as much as we want, and then were going to let the computer figure out the answer.
With this shotgun approach to data collection, data breaches, either because of internal mistakes or external hacking, become increasingly risky. Cerebral had been using pixel trackerscode that collects activity datato monitor user engagement for the past four years. And only in 2023 did the company realize that this data was being shared with Meta, TikTok and Google in a breach affecting 3.2 million patients. Similarly, a security flaw in the IT systems of Vastaamo, referred to as the McDonalds of psychotherapy, led to its entire patient database being leaked to the internet, including email addresses, social security numbers and therapists notes. Around 30,000 people received ransom demands from hackers threatening to publish their private information.
And some companies have even shared data willfully. The Federal Trade Commission went after the online counseling service BetterHelp for pushing people to give sensitive health information while promising absolute privacybut then BetterHelp handed that data over to Facebook, Pinterest, Snapchat, Criteo and other advertisers. BetterHelp has since agreed to a $7.8 million settlement for alleged data misuse. Digital psychiatry may promise mental health care from the privacy of peoples homes, but what does that privacy mean in a world of seemingly endless leaks?
According to Malin, any health care provider can search a patients physical informationlab tests, imaging, vitals. But mental health information is only known to those doctors whom it is shared with in consult. And our thoughts are sensitivethey concern other people, about things that have yet to happen, about the world that only we can see. It does make it very juicy information, for lack of a better term, Malin adds. The question is: How much support are you going to provide for personal rights and protection versus the end application?
Such sensitive information leaves little room for error. The penalties of being wrong are severe, says Colin Walsh, an internal medicine physician at Vanderbilt. If an algorithm says an individual is high-risk and they arent, they may receive an intervention that they dont need. Walsh brings up the example of the military, where these kinds of false positives can be career altering: A commander might take that information and not want to send them on deployment.
Already were seeing students forced to withdraw from college after university medical staff inform administrators of their conditionsand workers are getting fired from their jobs after voluntarily disclosing their mental illnesses. With the propagation of digital psychiatry, providers, supervisors and administrators could get access to even richer personalized data, collected through routine onboarding processes or employer-provided mental health services. While these data usually tend to be de-identified, Walsh notes that they can always be re-identified. In his eyes, the rise of digital psychiatry could bring a rise in stigma and discrimination against those with psychiatric conditions.
For the time being, medical health professionals think its unlikely that digital psychiatry will fully replace human clinicians. Apart from the lack of scientific evidence to support these technologies, apps are simply unable to provide a humanistic experience. One of the biggest factors in successful therapy is the quality of the relationship between the individual and the therapist, says Saripalli. I dont think youre going to get a human personalized touch if this is your primary provision of treatment.
If anything, digital psychiatry might exacerbate the very inequities it hoped to address. Indeed, left unregulated, mental health companies can profit off those who cant afford traditional care by offering cheap, ineffective treatments. At the higher end of the income spectrum, people are going to pay for a premium product, and theres no question that in-person, one-on-one individualized attention is going to be superior, Saripalli adds.
Nonetheless, everyone interviewed for this story believes that the digital psychiatry movement is far from slowing downand that providers need to actively participate to ensure it doesnt harm patients. While part of this movement is undoubtedly driven by hype and feckless profiteering, real potential exists for digital solutions to alleviate the burdens of a mental health care system on the brink of collapse. The question becomes how to identify these promising use-cases and bring together mental health providers, data privacy officials and patients to ensure that we are progressing in an evidence-based, secure way.
Theres this idea, move fast and break thingsthat old Silicon Valley mantra, says Walsh. In health care, that means people get hurt.
Get the latest Science stories in your inbox.
Recommended Videos
See more here:
Can Digital Psychiatry Really Fill the Mental Health Care Gap? - Smithsonian Magazine
- What it's like in internal medicine: Shadowing Dr. Graham - American Medical Association - December 9th, 2024 [December 9th, 2024]
- Grants Awarded to the Department of Internal Medicine (December 2024) - Yale School of Medicine - December 9th, 2024 [December 9th, 2024]
- UPMC plans to wind down internal medicine residency at UPMC McKeesport - The Business Journals - November 28th, 2024 [November 28th, 2024]
- Marzena Odorczuk, MD of Internal Medicine Of Totowa Awarded As 2024 NJ Top Doc - EIN News - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- From residency to leadership: the evolution of internal medicine [PODCAST] - Kevin MD - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Internal Medicine residency launched at MUSC Health Florence Medical Center - Medical University of South Carolina - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Statesville Internal Medicine Moving to Bryant Street - Iredell Health System - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- Medical students honor Internal Medicine faculty, fellows they aspire to emulate - UT Southwestern - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- Grants Awarded to the Department of Internal Medicine (September 2024) - Yale School of Medicine - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- Yale Internal Medicine Reflects on Past 10 Years in New Report - Yale School of Medicine - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- Meet ABIMs new leader: The future is bright for internal medicine - Medical Economics - September 2nd, 2024 [September 2nd, 2024]
- Should neonatal-perinatal medicine move to two-year fellowships? | Journal of Perinatology - Nature.com - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Vigorous exercise may preserve cognition in high-risk patients with hypertension - EurekAlert - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Studying the effects of probiotics for idiopathic epilepsy - DVM 360 - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Pride Celebrated at UConn Health - UConn Today - University of Connecticut - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Residents and Faculty Shine at Internal Medicine Annual Meeting - Washington State University - June 1st, 2024 [June 1st, 2024]
- Opinion | Smoking Isn't the Only Source of Nicotine Addiction in Town - Medpage Today - June 1st, 2024 [June 1st, 2024]
- Benefis gets approval for Internal Medicine residency program - KRTV NEWS Great Falls - June 1st, 2024 [June 1st, 2024]
- A Mother's Encouragement and a Husband-Wife Doctor Team Set the Stage for a Career in Hematologic Oncology - The ASCO Post - June 1st, 2024 [June 1st, 2024]
- Local doctor to share new lifestyle health techniques with Longboaters - Your Observer - June 1st, 2024 [June 1st, 2024]
- Marquis Who's Who Honors H. Kenneth Fisher, MD, for Expertise in Medicine - 24-7 Press Release - June 1st, 2024 [June 1st, 2024]
- Clinical Score Predicts Recovery From Dialysis Dependent Acute Kidney Injury - MedicalResearch.com - June 1st, 2024 [June 1st, 2024]
- Interdisciplinary Curriculum Boosts Women's Health and Gender-Affirming Care in Internal Medicine Residency - Yale School of Medicine - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- David Jerome Becker Obituary - - Hartford Courant - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- Med students earn awards as part of Cape Fear Research Symposium - News | Campbell University - Campbell University News - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- Rowan University graduate inspired to pursue internal medicine after cancer journey - CBS Philly - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- UChicago Medicine residents unionize in landslide election | Evening Digest | hpherald.com - Hyde Park Herald - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- McKee Names New Head of Health, 5th Director in Three Years - GoLocalProv - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- An Internal Medicine Physician & Aesthetic Specialist's Best Tips | mindbodygreen - mindbodygreen - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- Health-related quality of life assessment tool for cats with hyperthyroidism - DVM 360 - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- Finding the Right Approach to Treating Asthma < Yale School of Medicine - Yale School of Medicine - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- Stigmatizing Language Common in Clinical Notes for Patients With SUD - Medpage Today - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- Patrick Hemming, MD: Depression, Anxiety Treatment by the Internal Medicine Physician - MD Magazine - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- UConn Health's Dr. Rebecca Andrews Takes on New National Role - UConn Today - University of Connecticut - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Women are less likely to die when treated by female doctors, study suggests - Yahoo! Voices - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Are female doctors the key to keeping patients alive longer? - - Study Finds - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Anne Thorndike, MD, MPH: Discussing Treatment Approaches for Patients with Obesity - MD Magazine - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Prolonged Medical Fasting May Benefit Pain Symptoms in Fibromyalgia - MD Magazine - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Discussing Ways to Approach Improving Obesity Care with Melanie Jay, MD - MD Magazine - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Timothy Wilt, MD, MPH: Discussing Colorectal Cancer Screening Options Recommended by ACP - MD Magazine - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- 'Sluggish' Hospital Uptake of Newer Antibiotics for Gram-Negative Infections - Medpage Today - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Elizabeth Cerceo, MD, on How to Address Health Care's Impact on Climate Change - MD Magazine - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Melanie Jay, MD: Advancing Equitable Approaches to Improve Obesity Care - MD Magazine - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- American College of Physicians issues clinical recommendations for newer pharmacological treatments of adults with ... - InvestorsObserver - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Scientists unveil new remote-controlled 'pillbot' a microrobot that you can swallow for early disease detection - Good Good Good - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- What We Would Be If We Weren't Doctors - Medpage Today - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Dual-Tasking: Spotlighting the Impacts on Individuals with Dementia - MD Magazine - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- Here Are The Suggestions Of Internal Medicine Specialist Doctors So That The Body Is Healthy After Eid - VOI English - April 23rd, 2024 [April 23rd, 2024]
- New Professors in the Department of Internal Medicine - Yale School of Medicine - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Nephrologist Choudhry now part of GGH team | Health | fltimes.com - Finger Lakes Times - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Department of Internal Medicine Grand Rounds - The University of Arizona College of Medicine Phoenix - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- McLaren Port Huron to launch internal medicine resident physician program - The Times Herald - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Implementation and Evaluation of a Pilot Narrative Medicine Curriculum for Internal Medicine Residents - Cureus - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Facing doctor shortage, BayCare to train hundreds more in Tampa Bay - Tampa Bay Times - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- NYU Langone Health in the NewsThursday, February 1, 2024 - NYU Langone Health - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Dr. Ben Gallagher Receives SGIM Northeast Region's Award for Excellence in Clinician Education - Yale School of Medicine - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Tulsa Doctor Shares 7 Steps To A Healthier Heart - News On 6 - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Perceptions of X+Y Scheduling Among Combined Internal Medicine-Pediatrics Residency Trainees: A Qualitative ... - Cureus - January 27th, 2024 [January 27th, 2024]
- Taskforce works to end racialized differences in medical education and practice - Wayne State University - January 27th, 2024 [January 27th, 2024]
- Toms River Internal Medicine Specialist, Dr. Prabhat Sinha Awarded As NJ Top Doc - EIN News - January 27th, 2024 [January 27th, 2024]
- Against Physician-Assisted Suicide: A Physicians Letter to His Legislator - Word on Fire - January 27th, 2024 [January 27th, 2024]
- Medical Mystery Case: What Landed This Pregnant Woman in the Hospital? - Medpage Today - January 8th, 2024 [January 8th, 2024]
- NYU Langone Health in the NewsWednesday, December 27, 2023 - NYU Langone Health - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- Internal Medicine Specialist Discusses Weight-Loss Medication - News On 6 - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- Adoption of Internal Medicine Milestone Ratings and Changes in Bias Against Black, Latino, and Asian Internal ... - Annals of Internal Medicine - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- Beebe welcomes award-winning infectious disease specialist - CapeGazette.com - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- People rally around doctor who refused to provide medical assistance on flight for a valid reason - Upworthy - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- Adventist Health Tillamook welcomes new top Internal Medicine Provider - Tillamook Headlight-Herald - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- Perceived Preparedness of Internal Medicine Interns for Residency and the Value of Transition to Residency Courses - Cureus - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- Remembering Vice Adm. Michael Cowan, the 34th Surgeon General of Navy Medicine (2001-2004) - American Military News - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- Enhancing the Comprehensive Integration of General Medicine Education in Rural Japan: A Thematic Analysis - Cureus - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- James Murray named head doctor at Confluence Health - Source ONE News - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- The Analysis of Job Satisfaction of Health Practitioners in Saudi Arabia: Determinants and Strategic Recommendations ... - Cureus - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- Top docs of 2023and what it takes to be one - MD Linx - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- Another Medical Society Turns Up the Heat on MOC - Medpage Today - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- SMH Addiction and Internal Medicine Clinic caring for the whole ... - Sheridan Media - May 13th, 2023 [May 13th, 2023]
- Irene Chernova is the 2023 Dostanic Award Recipient - Yale School of Medicine - May 13th, 2023 [May 13th, 2023]
- Sanders, HBCU medical schools in Atlanta to talk health care diversity - The Atlanta Journal Constitution - May 13th, 2023 [May 13th, 2023]
- Capital Area Health Consortium Honors UConn Health Nurse ... - University of Connecticut - May 13th, 2023 [May 13th, 2023]
- Alzheimer's treatment Leqembi could cost Medicare up to $5 billion per year, study estimates - CNBC - May 13th, 2023 [May 13th, 2023]