A Mixed Methods Evaluation of a Pilot Open Trial of a Mentor-Guided Digital Intervention for Youth Anxiety

Author:
Wolfe, Emma, Psychology - Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, University of Virginia
Advisor:
Teachman, Bethany, AS-Psychology (PSYC), University of Virginia
Abstract:

Digital mental health interventions (DMHIs), such as cognitive bias modification for interpretations (CBM-I), offer promise for increasing access to anxiety treatment among underserved adolescents, but data regarding their efficacy are mixed. Paraprofessionals and other caring adults in youth’s lives, such as non-parental adult mentors, may be able to support the use of DMHIs and increase teen engagement. The present mixed methods evaluation of a pilot open trial tested the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of implementing MindTrails Teen (an app-based, youth-adapted version of the web-based MindTrails CBM-I intervention) within mentor/mentee dyads. Thirty participants (composed of 15 dyads) participated in remote data collection for 5 weeks. A subset of participants (n=7 mentors; n=7 mentees) also provided qualitative feedback. Intervention outcomes (change in anxiety symptoms, and positive and negative interpretation bias), feasibility and acceptability were assessed via a mix of qualitative interviews, quantitative change in questionnaire scores, and program completion and fidelity metrics. Outcomes were compared to pre-registered benchmarks. Large effect sizes were observed for changes in anxiety among youth. Small to medium effects were observed for change in positive interpretation bias, and no change was found for negative interpretation bias. Interpretation bias results should be interpreted with caution given very low internal consistency of the measure. Acceptability was rated positively by mentors and youth. Feasibility benchmarks were met for mentors but not for youth. Qualitative feedback indicated mentors perceived the app as helpful to their mentees, found that it either improved or did not affect their relationship, but also identified implementation challenges. Youth overall perceived the app as helpful but also identified barriers to engagement.

Degree:
MA (Master of Arts)
Keywords:
digital mental health, anxiety, cognitive bias modification , youth mental health , digital technology
Language:
English
Issued Date:
2025/05/15