TY - JOUR AU - Huffman, Landry Goodgame AU - Lawrence-Sidebottom, Darian AU - Huberty, Jennifer AU - Roots, Monika AU - Roots, Kurt AU - Parikh, Amit AU - Guerra, Rachael AU - Weiser, Jaclyn PY - 2023 DA - 2023/4/20 TI - Using Digital Measurement–Based Care for the Treatment of Anxiety and Depression in Children and Adolescents: Observational Retrospective Analysis of Bend Health Data JO - JMIR Pediatr Parent SP - e46154 VL - 6 KW - digital mental health intervention KW - anxiety KW - depression KW - child KW - adolescent KW - collaborative care KW - mental health KW - caregiver KW - pediatric KW - youth KW - demographic KW - health outcome KW - retrospective KW - treatment KW - e-mental health KW - symptoms AB - Background: A growing body of evidence supports the efficacy of measurement-based care (MBC) for children and adolescents experiencing mental health concerns, particularly anxiety and depression. In recent years, MBC has increasingly transitioned to web-based spaces in the form of digital mental health interventions (DMHIs), which render high-quality mental health care more accessible nationwide. Although extant research is promising, the emergence of MBC DMHIs means that much is unknown regarding their effectiveness as a treatment for anxiety and depression, particularly among children and adolescents. Objective: This study uses preliminary data from children and adolescents participating in an MBC DMHI administered by Bend Health Inc, a mental health care provider that uses a collaborative care model to assess changes in anxiety and depressive symptoms during participation in the MBC DMHI. Methods: Caregivers of children and adolescents participating in Bend Health Inc for anxiety or depressive symptoms reported measures of their children’s symptoms every 30 days throughout the duration of participation in Bend Health Inc. Data from 114 children (age 6-12 years) and adolescents (age 13-17 years) were used for the analyses (anxiety symptom group: n=98, depressive symptom group: n=61). Results: Among children and adolescents participating in care with Bend Health Inc, 73% (72/98) exhibited improvements in anxiety symptoms and 73% (44/61) exhibited improvement in depressive symptoms, as indicated by either a decrease in symptom severity or screening out of completing the complete assessment. Among those with complete assessment data, group-level anxiety symptom T-scores exhibited a moderate decrease of 4.69 points (P=.002) from the first to the last assessment. However, members’ depressive symptom T-scores remained largely stable throughout their involvement. Conclusions: As increasing numbers of young people and families seek DMHIs over traditional mental health treatments due to their accessibility and affordability, this study offers promising early evidence that youth anxiety symptoms decrease during involvement in an MBC DMHI such as Bend Health Inc. However, further analyses with enhanced longitudinal symptom measures are necessary to determine whether depressive symptoms show similar improvements among those involved in Bend Health Inc. SN - 2561-6722 UR - https://pediatrics.jmir.org/2023/1/e46154 UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/46154 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37079366 DO - 10.2196/46154 ID - info:doi/10.2196/46154 ER -