Mobile Health Interventions
Cross-source consensus on Mobile Health Interventions from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Bro delivers safety planning through chatbot dialogue and was co-designed with rangatahi Māori. — TIPS (Trans-Tasman Internet-delivered Prevention of (youth) Suicide) study: protocol for a randomised controlled trial of mobile health interventions (four apps) to help young people reduce suicidal ideation
- LifeBuoy uses seven sequential DBT and ACT modules to teach distress tolerance, emotion regulation, mindfulness, and values-based action. — TIPS (Trans-Tasman Internet-delivered Prevention of (youth) Suicide) study: protocol for a randomised controlled trial of mobile health interventions (four apps) to help young people reduce suicidal ideation
- My Mood functions as an attention-control app by isolating non-specific app engagement effects from therapeutic content. — TIPS (Trans-Tasman Internet-delivered Prevention of (youth) Suicide) study: protocol for a randomised controlled trial of mobile health interventions (four apps) to help young people reduce suicidal ideation
- Tune In aims to regulate emotion through goal-directed behaviour and self-efficacy. — TIPS (Trans-Tasman Internet-delivered Prevention of (youth) Suicide) study: protocol for a randomised controlled trial of mobile health interventions (four apps) to help young people reduce suicidal ideation
- Tune In uses goal-setting and behaviour change in a culturally responsive app from New Zealand. — TIPS (Trans-Tasman Internet-delivered Prevention of (youth) Suicide) study: protocol for a randomised controlled trial of mobile health interventions (four apps) to help young people reduce suicidal ideation