Exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in Irish mental health services

Abstract Background The World Health Organization report that an estimated 793,000 people died by suicide in 2016 globally. The use of digital technology has been found to be beneficial in the delivery of Web-based suicide prevention interventions. Research on the integration of digital technology w...

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Main Authors: Ruth Melia, Luke Monahan, Jim Duggan, John Bogue, Mary O’Sullivan, Karen Young, Derek Chambers, Shane McInerney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-08-01
Series:BMC Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-021-03426-5
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spelling doaj-b63f970fb7344ebd86c251b2b80b4a412021-08-22T11:09:42ZengBMCBMC Psychiatry1471-244X2021-08-0121111110.1186/s12888-021-03426-5Exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in Irish mental health servicesRuth Melia0Luke Monahan1Jim Duggan2John Bogue3Mary O’Sullivan4Karen Young5Derek Chambers6Shane McInerney7Health Service ExecutiveIrish Management InstituteNational University of IrelandNational University of IrelandHealth Service ExecutiveNational University of IrelandHealth Service ExecutiveHealth Service ExecutiveAbstract Background The World Health Organization report that an estimated 793,000 people died by suicide in 2016 globally. The use of digital technology has been found to be beneficial in the delivery of Web-based suicide prevention interventions. Research on the integration of digital technology within mental health services has indicated that despite the proliferation of technology, engagement by patients and professionals in adopting such technology can be poor. Objectives The current study aims to explore the experiences of 15 mental health professionals involved in integrating mobile health technology into their practice. A secondary aim was to identify the drivers and barriers to the adoption of such technology by mental health professionals, and to consider what theoretical models could best account for the data. Methods Semi-structured interviews, conducted from July to October 2019, were used to explore the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology within mental health services. Mental Health professionals and clinician managers working in HSE Child and Adolescent Mental Health, Adult Mental Health, and Primary Care Psychology services were recruited for the study. Qualitative interview data was transcribed and analysed using NVivo. Thematic Analysis was used to identify themes. Results Four major themes were identified: Accessibility, ‘Transitional Object’, Integration, and Trust. Within these 4 major themes, a total of 9 subthemes were identified: Service Accessibility, Immediate Access, Client Engagement, Adjunct-to-therapy, Therapeutic Relationship, Infrastructural Support, Enhancing Treatment, Trust in the Technology, Trust in the Organisation. Conclusions Overall, Diffusion of Innovation Theory provides a useful theoretical framework which is consistent with and can adequately account for many of the Major and Subthemes identified in the data. In addition, ‘Transitional Objects’, a key concept within Object Relations Theory, could offer a means of better understanding how patients and professionals engage with digital technology within mental health services particularly.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-021-03426-5Mobile health technologymHealthMental healthTechnology adoption
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ruth Melia
Luke Monahan
Jim Duggan
John Bogue
Mary O’Sullivan
Karen Young
Derek Chambers
Shane McInerney
spellingShingle Ruth Melia
Luke Monahan
Jim Duggan
John Bogue
Mary O’Sullivan
Karen Young
Derek Chambers
Shane McInerney
Exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in Irish mental health services
BMC Psychiatry
Mobile health technology
mHealth
Mental health
Technology adoption
author_facet Ruth Melia
Luke Monahan
Jim Duggan
John Bogue
Mary O’Sullivan
Karen Young
Derek Chambers
Shane McInerney
author_sort Ruth Melia
title Exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in Irish mental health services
title_short Exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in Irish mental health services
title_full Exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in Irish mental health services
title_fullStr Exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in Irish mental health services
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in Irish mental health services
title_sort exploring the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology in irish mental health services
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychiatry
issn 1471-244X
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Background The World Health Organization report that an estimated 793,000 people died by suicide in 2016 globally. The use of digital technology has been found to be beneficial in the delivery of Web-based suicide prevention interventions. Research on the integration of digital technology within mental health services has indicated that despite the proliferation of technology, engagement by patients and professionals in adopting such technology can be poor. Objectives The current study aims to explore the experiences of 15 mental health professionals involved in integrating mobile health technology into their practice. A secondary aim was to identify the drivers and barriers to the adoption of such technology by mental health professionals, and to consider what theoretical models could best account for the data. Methods Semi-structured interviews, conducted from July to October 2019, were used to explore the experiences of mental health professionals engaged in the adoption of mobile health technology within mental health services. Mental Health professionals and clinician managers working in HSE Child and Adolescent Mental Health, Adult Mental Health, and Primary Care Psychology services were recruited for the study. Qualitative interview data was transcribed and analysed using NVivo. Thematic Analysis was used to identify themes. Results Four major themes were identified: Accessibility, ‘Transitional Object’, Integration, and Trust. Within these 4 major themes, a total of 9 subthemes were identified: Service Accessibility, Immediate Access, Client Engagement, Adjunct-to-therapy, Therapeutic Relationship, Infrastructural Support, Enhancing Treatment, Trust in the Technology, Trust in the Organisation. Conclusions Overall, Diffusion of Innovation Theory provides a useful theoretical framework which is consistent with and can adequately account for many of the Major and Subthemes identified in the data. In addition, ‘Transitional Objects’, a key concept within Object Relations Theory, could offer a means of better understanding how patients and professionals engage with digital technology within mental health services particularly.
topic Mobile health technology
mHealth
Mental health
Technology adoption
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-021-03426-5
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