Authors
Theresa Fleming, Mary Dewhirst, Alana Haenga-O’Brien, Victoria Chinn, Fabi Ormerod, Don Kafatolu, Helen Andreae, K Haenga-O’Brien, Pine Russ, Maria Da Rocha, Kyle Sutcliffe, Agnes Szabo, M Lucassen, Stanley Aspin
Publication date
2022/1/1
Publisher
Open Access Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington
Description
Digital tools such as computerised therapies, apps and websites have tremendous potential for mental health and wellbeing. Globally, millions of people download mental health or wellbeing apps every year. Within New Zealand, more than 10% of the population is likely to have accessed major websites or apps for depression in the last year. There are many evidence-based computerised therapies and thousands of evidenceinformed apps and websites. These include quality Aotearoa New Zealand digital tools with substantive Māori or Pacific led content. However, major challenges remain: many evidence-based tools have poor uptake or retention outside of trials; popular tools involve charges to users and do not have important mental health content; the digital divide can reinforce health inequities; and communities are often not seeking digital tools for mental health or do not trust these. In this report, we …
Total citations
2023202412