Treffer: Social Isolation and Serious Mental Illness: The Role of Context-Aware Mobile Interventions
Title:
Social Isolation and Serious Mental Illness: The Role of Context-Aware Mobile Interventions
Authors:
Source:
IEEE Pervasive Computing, vol 23, iss 1
Publisher Information:
eScholarship, University of California
Publication Year:
2024
Collection:
University of California: eScholarship
Subject Terms:
4606 Distributed Computing and Systems Software (for-2020), 46 Information and Computing Sciences (for-2020), Schizophrenia (rcdc), Mental Illness (rcdc), Behavioral and Social Science (rcdc), Clinical Research (rcdc), Rehabilitation (rcdc), Brain Disorders (rcdc), Mind and Body (rcdc), Serious Mental Illness (rcdc), Social Determinants of Health (rcdc), Mental Health (rcdc), Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities (rcdc), 6.6 Psychological and behavioural (hrcs-rac), 5.6 Psychological and behavioural (hrcs-rac), Mental health (hrcs-hc), 3 Good Health and Well Being (sdg), Sensors, Oral communication, Mental health, Medical treatment, Anxiety disorders, Global Positioning System, Smart phones, 0805 Distributed Computing (for), 0806 Information Systems (for), 0906 Electrical and Electronic Engineering (for), Distributed Computing (science-metrix)
Subject Geographic:
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift
article in journal/newspaper
File Description:
application/pdf
Language:
unknown
Relation:
DOI:
10.1109/mprv.2024.3377200
Availability:
Rights:
public
Accession Number:
edsbas.F33D3EE3
Database:
BASE
Weitere Informationen
Social isolation is a common problem faced by individuals with serious mental illness (SMI), and current intervention approaches have limited effectiveness. This paper presents a blended intervention approach, called mobile Social Interaction Therapy by Exposure (mSITE), to address social isolation in individuals with serious mental illness. The approach combines brief in-person cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) with context-triggered mobile CBT interventions that are personalized using mobile sensing data. Our approach targets social behavior and is the first context-aware intervention for improving social outcomes in serious mental illness.