Evaluating a mental health support mobile app for adults with type 1 diabetes living in rural and remote communities: The REACHOUT pilot study.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Evaluating a mental health support mobile app for adults with type 1 diabetes living in rural and remote communities: The REACHOUT pilot study.
Authors: Tang, Tricia S., Klein, Gerri, Görges, Matthias, Yip, Annie, Fisher, Lawrence, Polonsky, William H., Hessler, Danielle, Taylor, Deanne
Source: Diabetic Medicine; Mar2025, Vol. 42 Issue 3, p1-10, 10p
Subject Terms: PREVENTION of mental depression, TYPE 1 diabetes, MOBILE apps, PEOPLE with diabetes, MENTAL health, RESEARCH funding, PSYCHOLOGICAL distress, DIGITAL health, PILOT projects, TELEPSYCHOLOGY, LONGITUDINAL method, RURAL population, CONCEPTUAL structures, SOCIAL support, PSYCHOSOCIAL factors, ADULTS
Geographic Terms: CANADA
Abstract: Aims: To evaluate a mobile app that delivers mental health support to adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) living in rural and remote communities using the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Intervention fidelity, Maintenance (RE‐AIM) framework. Methods: This study recruited 46 adults to participate in a 6‐month intervention using REACHOUT, a mobile app that delivers peer‐led mental health support (one‐on‐one, group‐based texting and face‐to‐face virtual). Baseline and 6‐month assessments measured diabetes distress (DD), depressive symptoms and perceived support (from family/friends, health care team and peers) along with other RE‐AIM metrics. Results: Calculations for reach and adoption found that 3% of eligible adults enrolled in REACHOUT and 55% of diabetes education centres participated in recruitment efforts. Maintenance metrics revealed 56% and 24% of peer supporters and participants, respectively, became peer supporters for a subsequent randomized controlled trial of REACHOUT. Post‐intervention reductions were observed for overall distress (p = 0.007), powerlessness (p = 0.009), management distress (p = 0.001), social perception distress (p = 0.023), eating distress (p = 0.032) and depressive symptoms (p = 0.009); and elevations in support from family/friends and peers. After adjusting for sex and age, only support‐related improvements persisted. When analysing women and men groups separately, women reported lower levels of overall distress, three distress subscales, and higher levels of family/friends and peer support whereas men did not. Conclusions: While reach was relatively low, metrics for adoption and maintenance are promising. Improvements in distress were observed for the total sample, but these changes were reduced when controlling for sex and age, with significance maintained only for women. Digital health‐enabled peer support may be instrumental in the delivery of mental health support to geographically isolated communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Complementary Index
More Details
ISSN:07423071
DOI:10.1111/dme.15451
Published in:Diabetic Medicine
Language:English