Publication | Closed Access
Design for Mental Health
21
Citations
29
References
2019
Year
Unknown Venue
EducationMental Health InterventionMental HealthDigital InterventionPsychologyDigital Mental HealthHealth SciencesTechnology-based InterventionMental Health ServicesAssistive TechnologyPsychiatrySocio-emotional HealthCognitive Behavioral InterventionMental Health NeedsBehavioral SupportMental Health MonitoringVersion 2.0Special EducationSelf-regulationPsychopathologyMobile Neurofeedback System
Millions of children have challenges with anxiety that negatively impact their development, education and well-being. To address this challenge, we developed version 2.0 of Mind-Full, a wearable, mobile neurofeedback system, designed to teach young children to learn to self-regulate anxiety. We present a mixed methods evaluation of a seven week long intervention in schools. We report on a subset of outcome measures related to 10 children's anxiety and stress in the classroom and describe mediating socio-technological processes that may have impacted outcomes. Findings showed improvement in children's ability to self-regulate anxiety and reduced cortisol levels for some children. Qualitative findings suggested that children who made multimodal connections during system mediated learning and had teacher support for learning transfer responded well to the intervention. We suggest that framing mental health app design as a distributed, adaptive, socio-technological system enables designers to better meet individual's unique and changing mental health needs.
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