Digital Mental Health Webinar Archive
December 2024: "From Design to Implementation: Integrating Cultural Adaptation and Community Engagement in Digital Mental Health"Adrian Aguilera, PhD, UC Berkeley Social Welfare and Computational Precision Health
Adrian Aguilera, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the School of Social Welfare at UC Berkeley and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at UC San Francisco. At UC Berkeley, Dr. Aguilera directs the Digital Health Equity and Access Lab (dHEAL). Dr. Aguilera is trained as a clinical psychologist and is an expert in cognitive and behavioral approaches to treating depression and anxiety. His research is focused on utilizing mobile phone technologies and data science to implement mental health interventions to address health disparities in low-income and marginalized populations. He is passionate about leveraging digital health for equity. He leads work in innovative digital health interventions that are designed with and for underserved communities and conducts pragmatic, real world implementations in public sector and community based settings. He partners with community organizations to leverage capacity and conduct research that is relevant to their needs. Furthermore, he directs the Center of Excellence in Behavioral Health Equity, a HRSA funded workforce training grant to increase the capacity of underrepresented students and faculty to serve the needs of diverse communities. He is bilingual (Spanish/English) and bicultural and conducts research studies and interventions in both languages. He has extensive formal training in implementation science for equity, community based research methods and integrating cultural sensitivity all while developing innovative digital technology based interventions.
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November 2024: "Feasibility, Acceptability, and Quality of Electronic and Self-Guided Safety Plans for Suicide Prevention"Kathryn R Fox, PhD, University of Denver
Kathryn Fox is a licensed clinical psychologist and assistant professor at the University of Denver. The primary goal of Kathryn's research is to improve the understanding and treatment of self-injurious thoughts and behaviors (broadly defined) and to help reduce these behaviors on a large-scale. Her research takes multiple approaches toward this aim, including summarizing existing research on this topic, conducting experimental and longitudinal studies of risk, and designing and testing novel and scalable treatments for these outcomes.
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October 2024: “The global adolescent mental health crisis: The role of digital health games in closing the gap"Lynn E. Fiellin, MD, Professor, Professor Adjunct, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, Yale Child Study Center, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Yale School of Public Health
Lynn E. Fiellin, MD, Professor, Professor Adjunct, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, Yale Child Study Center, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Yale School of Public Health
Dr. Lynn Fiellin is a professor with faculty appointments within the Departments of Biomedical Data Science, Medicine, and the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. She is the founding director of the play2PREVENT Lab, established 14 years ago with NIH funding, which focuses on developing and testing novel video game interventions to promote health and reduce risk in youth and young adults. In this webinar, Dr. Fiellin will share insights from her research of the power of gamification in healthcare.
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September 2024: "Multi-Sector Partnerships for Digital Mental Health Solutions in Schools"Katie Cohen, MA, Northwestern University, Gina Misch, PhD, Kooth Digital Health, Tom Osborn, Shamiri Institute
Katie Cohen, MA, Northwestern University, Gina Misch, PhD, Kooth Digital Health, Tom Osborn, Shamiri Institute
Moderator: Jessica Schleider, PhD, Northwestern University
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September 2023: Making digital health work for diverse communities: Addressing pain and mental healthCharles Jonassaint, PhD MHS, Associate Professor of Medicine, Social Work, and Biomedical Informatics, University of Pittsburgh
Dr. Charles Jonassaint is an associate professor of medicine and a practicing clinical health psychologist with an MHS in epidemiology. He has clinical expertise in chronic disease self-management and cognitive behavioral therapy interventions and has had extensive experience working with health disparities populations, namely, adolescents and adults living with sickle cell disease. He completed his graduate training at Duke University and went on to do a masters in epidemiology and clinical research fellowship at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He is currently funded through the National Institute of Health and the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute to lead a program of research in sickle cell disease focused on designing and testing evidence-based digital health interventions for pain and mental health.
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December 2023: How Human-AI Collaboration Will Improve Mental HealthTim Althoff, PhD, Assistant professor in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Washington
Tim Althoff is an assistant professor in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Washington. His research advances computational methods that leverage large-scale behavioral data to extract actionable insights about our lives, health, and happiness through combining techniques from data science, social network analysis, and natural language processing. Tim holds a Ph.D. degree from the Computer Science Department at Stanford University. He has received several fellowships and awards including WWW, ICWSM and IMIA Best Paper Awards, the SIGKDD Dissertation Award 2019, and an NSF CAREER Award. Tim's research has been covered internationally by news outlets including BBC, CNN, The Economist, The Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times.
Website: https://homes.cs.washington.edu/~althoff/
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January 2024: Leveraging multi-sector partnerships to increase reach and impact of digital mental health interventions.Ellen Fitzsimmons-Craft, PhD, Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA, Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Ellen Fitzsimmons-Craft, PhD is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA, and a licensed clinical psychologist. She has established programmatic lines of research centering on the use of technology for eating disorder prevention and treatment, eating disorder screening, sociocultural etiological and maintenance factors for eating disorders, eating disorder recovery, and college mental health. Ultimately Dr. Fitzsimmons-Craft’s work aims to disseminate evidence-based interventions from research to practice as well as extend treatments in ways that will reach the large number of people in need of care for mental health problems but who are not receiving services. She is a Fellow in the Academy for Eating Disorders and is a current recipient of a National Institute of Mental Health Career Development Award. Dr. Fitzsimmons-Craft is passionate about increasing access to scalable, evidence-based mental health services, collaborating with numerous industry partners, non-profit organizations, including the National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA) and the National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders (ANAD), and statewide groups in the U.S. in order to do so. Her work has been featured in high-profile media outlets such as the New York Times, NPR, the Wall Street Journal, Wired, and Forbes.
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February 2024: Centering LGBTQ adolescents in digital sexual health and HIV prevention researchKathryn Macapagal, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Medical Social Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Associate Director, THRIVE Center, Institute for Sexual and Gender Minority Health and Wellbeing, Northwestern University
Kathryn Macapagal, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Medical Social Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Associate Director, THRIVE Center, Institute for Sexual and Gender Minority Health and Wellbeing, Northwestern University
Kathryn Macapagal, PhD, conducts translational, social-behavioral and implementation research focused on improving the health and wellbeing of sexual and gender minority (SGM) adolescents and young adults. Her independent research relies on online, technology-based, and community-engaged research methods to understand sexual health and HIV prevention needs of SGM adolescents, and then develop, test, and explore implementation of digital behavioral health interventions to address these needs.
Her recent and ongoing threads of work have 1) examined awareness, knowledge, use, and preferences of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among SGM adolescents and have conducted formative research on developing digital PrEP campaigns for teens; 2) explored use of online spaces including sexual networking applications for sexual and relationship development among SGM teens and its clinical, educational, and technology implications; and 3) developing a text-message based intervention to improve HIV testing and sexual healthcare access among SGM teens. Earlier in her career, she focused on ethical issues in HIV prevention research among SGM adolescents, a topic that is foundational to her current research and that she continues to weave throughout her work.
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March 2024: Frameworks for Human Centered Design of Complex Psychosocial Interventions
Sean Munson, PhD, Human Centered Design & Engineering & UW ALACRITY Center, University of Washington
Sean Munson, PhD, Human Centered Design & Engineering & UW ALACRITY Center, University of Washington
Dr. Sean Munson is a Professor of Human Centered Design & Engineering and co-director of the UW ALACRITY Center at the University of Washington. In his research, Sean develops and evaluates techniques for collecting and making sense of data about one's health and wellbeing, designing for coordination and collaboration, and bringing together the expertise necessary to understand and act on personal health data.
Sean's research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality, the National Institutes of Health, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, and Google. He is the recipient of a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award and is a Distinguished Member of the ACM. Sean completed a BS in Engineering at Olin College in 2006 and his PhD at the University of Michigan School of Information in 2012. Previously, he was a political blogger and, while at Boeing, designed concepts for future passenger airplane interiors.
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April 2024: Will it Work? Using Causal Diagramming to Inform the Design and Implementation of Mobile Health InterventionsPredrag “Pedja” Klasnja, PhD, School of Information, University of Michigan
Predrag "Pedja" Klasnja is an Associate Professor in the School of Information at the University of Michigan. He focuses on the design and optimization of novel mHealth technologies for health behavior change. He is particularly interested in the design and evaluation of just-in-time adaptive interventions (JITAIs), interventions that continuously adapt their functioning to provide optimal support to individuals as their needs and circumstances change. In addition to his intervention development work, Dr. Klasnja develops optimization methods for implementation science, with an emphasis on causal modeling of processes hypothesized to underlie the functioning of implementation strategies.
Webinar Recording:
https://youtu.be/ZSAXsEyOG8U?feature=shared
May 2024: A New Era of Experiential Medicine: Cognitive Enhancement TechnologiesAdam Gazzaley, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Neurology, Physiology and Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco
Adam Gazzaley, M.D., Ph.D. is the David Dolby Distinguished Professor of Neurology, Physiology and Psychiatry, and the Founder & Executive Director of Neuroscape at UCSF. Dr. Gazzaley is co-founder of Akili and JAZZ Venture Partners. He has been a scientific advisor for dozens of companies, filed multiple patents - notably his invention of the first video game cleared by the FDA, authored over 180 scientific articles and delivered over 700 invited presentations around the world. He wrote and hosted the nationally-televised PBS special “The Distracted Mind with Dr. Adam Gazzaley”, and co-authored the 2016 MIT Press book “The Distracted Mind: Ancient Brains in a High-Tech World”, winner of the 2017 PROSE Award. He is the recipient of the 2015 SfN Science Educator Award, the 2020 Global Gaming Citizen Honor and named in Newsweek's 2021 Inaugural list of America’s Greatest Disruptors.
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June 2023: Scaling mental health services through technology-enhanced mentoringJean Rhodes, Ph.D. and Alexandra Werntz, Ph.D.
University of Massachusetts, Boston, Center for Evidence-Based Mentoring
University of Massachusetts, Boston, Center for Evidence-Based Mentoring
Professor Rhodes is the Frank L. Boyden Professor of clinical psychology and Director of the Center for Evidence-Based Mentoring at the University of Massachusetts Boston (UMB). She has devoted her career to understanding and advancing the role of mentoring relationships in the social-emotional, educational, and career development of students. Rhodes has published three books, four edited volumes, and over 250 chapters and peer-reviewed articles on topics related to positive youth development, the transition to adulthood, and mentoring. Her recent research has focused on understanding how peer mentors and other paraprofessionals can bridge gaps in mental health care through a technology-delivered supportive accountability platform.
Alexandra Werntz received her Ph.D. in clinical psychology at the University of Virginia. She completed her postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Massachusetts Boston and the University of Virginia and was funded in-part by AIM Youth Mental Health. Her recent research has focused on understanding how mentors can provide supportive accountability to mentees engaging in digital mental health interventions. Dr. Werntz is also a licensed clinical psychologist practicing in Virginia, specializing in anxiety, depression, end-of-life issues, and trauma. She feels passionately that evidence-based mental health skills do not need to be taught by trained mental health providers, but instead can be taught by and practiced with trained paraprofessionals. With the CEBM team, she is excited to advance the science of training mentors to support their mentees in reaching their full mental health and wellbeing potential.
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May 2023: Digital Mental Interventions for Increased EquityAdrian Aguilera, PhD, UC Berkeley Social Welfare, Digital Health Equity and Access Lab (dHEAL)
Adrian Aguilera, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the School of Social Welfare at UC Berkeley and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at UC San Francisco. At UC Berkeley, Dr. Aguilera directs the Digital Health Equity and Access Lab (dHEAL), and at UCSF, he directs the Latino Mental Health Research Program (LMHRP) and co-leads SOLVE HealthTech. Dr. Aguilera is trained as a clinical psychologist and is an expert in cognitive and behavioral approaches to treat depression and anxiety.. His research is focused on developing and testing technology-based interventions to address health disparities in low-income and Spanish speaking populations. His work has focused on utilizing digital technologies to improve and implement mental health interventions. He is passionate about leveraging digital health for equity.
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April 2023: A Proposed Framework for Designing Trials Evaluating the Effectiveness and Implementation of Digital Behavioral Health InterventionsTheresa Matson, PhD, MPH (Collaborative Scientist, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute), and Joseph Glass, PhD, MSW (Associate Investigator, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute; Affiliate Associate Professor, University of Washington Department of Health Systems and Population Health)
Theresa ("Tessa") Matson, PhD, MPH is a Collaborative Scientist at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute. Dr. Matson’s research seeks to integrate addiction health services within primary care in patient-centered ways that reduce disparities and help patients feel valued and more informed about treatment options. Recent work describes gaps and potential biases in diagnosis and treatment of cannabis use disorder and validates practical tools to improve its recognition in primary care. Dr. Matson currently applies her implementation science expertise on NIDA-funded trials designed to improve the provision of care for opioid and other substance use disorders in primary care settings, including studies to promote equity in the reach of digital interventions for substance use disorders. During her doctoral studies at University of Washington’s Department of Health Systems and Population Health, Tessa completed a predoctoral fellowship at VA Puget Sound, where she studied system-level, organizational-level, and patient-level determinants to receipt of evidence-based treatment for alcohol use disorder and other essential care among vulnerable populations, and applied motivational interviewing and user-centered design principles as approaches to improve patient engagement.
Joseph Glass, PhD, MSW, is an Associate Investigator at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute and Affiliate Associate Professor of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and the Department of Health Systems and Population Health at University of Washington. He studies how to reach more patients who have substance use disorders with effective treatments. As a clinical social worker by training, he brings a unique perspective to this problem. Much of his recent work, which is funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and National Institute on Drug Abuse, applies implementation science methods to study the integration of digital therapeutics into healthcare systems.
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March 2023: Towards viable payment for effective digital therapeuticsMichael Schoenbaum, PhD, National Institute of Mental Health's Division of Services and Intervention Research
Michael Schoenbaum (PhD in Economics, University of Michigan) is Senior Advisor for Mental Health Services, Epidemiology, and Economics in the National Institute of Mental Health's Division of Services and Intervention Research. He conducts analyses of mental health burden, service use and costs, intervention opportunities, and other policy-related issues, in support of Institute decision-making; and he works to strengthen NIMH's relationships with public and private stakeholders, to increase the public health impact of NIMH-supported research. Dr. Schoenbaum's research has focused particularly on the benefits and costs of interventions to improve health and health care, evaluated from the perspectives of patients, providers, payers and society.
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February 2023: Increasing the Uptake Of Effective Services for Youth Substance Use via Scalable Digital HealthSara Becker, PhD, Center for Dissemination and Implementation Science, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Sara Becker, PhD, is the Alice Hamilton Professor of Psychiatry and the inaugural director of the Center for Dissemination & Implementation Science. Trained as a clinical psychologist, Becker conducts programmatic research integrating both dissemination and implementation science methods. To date, she has been the principal investigator or scientific lead of 11 projects funded by the National Institutes of Health, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, totaling approximately $35 million in funding. The overarching objective of her portfolio is to increase the equitable uptake of effective health services in community or clinical settings.
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January 2023: Google's approach to improving mental healthMegan Jones-Bell, PsyD, Google
Dr. Megan Jones-Bell is clinical director of consumer and mental health at Google and gets to think about how to improve health for billions of people. She was formerly chief strategy and science officer at Headspace and helped guide Headspace through its transformation from a meditation app into a comprehensive digital mental health platform, Headspace Health. Megan founded one of the first digital mental health start-ups, Lantern, where she pioneered blended mental health interventions leveraging software and coaching.
Megan started her career at Stanford University where she was an assistant professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. At Stanford and in her work with the European Union Megan developed and disseminated over two dozen evidence-based digital mental health interventions and conducted research in the US, Europe, India, and Brazil. Megan clinically specializes in the treatment of adolescents and young adults and is an expert in the prevention and treatment of eating disorders and obesity.
Megan serves on the Board of the Child Mind Institute, Castilleja School and the Scientific Advisory Board for HFC. Megan is a Fellow of the Aspen Institute Health Innovators Fellowship and a member of the Aspen Global Leadership Network.
Megan earned her bachelor’s degree in psychology, graduating cum laude from University of California, San Diego. She received her master’s degree and doctorate in clinical psychology from PGSP-Stanford University, and completed fellowships at Yale University and Stanford University School of Medicine.
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December 2022: Utilizing Passively Collected Data in Daily Life to Enhance the Assessment and Treatment of Mental HealthNicholas C. Jacobson, PhD, Departments of Biomedical Data Science, Psychiatry and Computer Science, Center for Technology and Behavioral Health, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College
Dr. Nick Jacobson is a tenure-track assistant professor in the departments of Biomedical Data Science and Psychiatry within the Center for Technology and Behavioral Health in the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College. He directs the AI and Mental Health: Innovation in Technology Guided Healthcare (AIM HIGH) Laboratory. Dr. Jacobson researches the use of technology to enhance both the assessment and treatment of anxiety and depression. His work has focused on (1) enhancing precision assessment of anxiety and depression using intensive longitudinal data, (2) conducting multimethod assessment utilizing passive sensor data from smartphones and wearable devices, and (3) providing scalable, personalized technology-based treatments utilizing smartphones. He has a strong interest in creating personalized just-in-time adaptive interventions and the quantitative tools that make this work possible. To date, Dr. Jacobson’s smartphone applications which assess and treat anxiety and depression have been downloaded and installed by more than 50,000 people in over 100 countries. Dr. Jacobson is the principal investigator of an R01 Awarded from the National Institute of Mental Health studying the use of personalized deep learning models to predict rapid changes in major depressive disorder symptoms using passive sensor data from smartphones and wearable devices.
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November 2023: Little Treatments, Big Effects: Building Brief Interventions to Reduce Psychopathology at ScaleJessica L. Schleider, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University
Dr. Jessica L. Schleider (she/her/hers) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology and Clinical Psychology Ph.D. Program at Stony Brook University (SUNY). She also serves as a Faculty Affiliate at the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science and was an Academic Consultant to the World Bank's Education Global Practice. Dr. Schleider has published over 80 scientific articles and book chapters. She has created or co-created six open-access, single-session mental health programs, which have reached over 30,000 teens and adults to date. Based on these programs, Dr. Schleider and her colleagues wrote a self-help workbook, The Growth Mindset Workbook for Teens. She is also co-editeor of the Oxford Guide to Brief and Low-Intensity Interventions for Children and Young People and wrote a nonfiction book, LITTLE TREATMENTS, BIG EFFECTS (forthcoming, 2023) on how single-session interventions and meaningful moments can transform mental health.
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October 2022: Understanding Psychological Traits Using Social Media LanguageLyle Ungar, PhD., University of Pennsylvania
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June 2022: "Celebrating CBITs 10th Anniversary: Integrating Design and Implementation for Digital Mental Health Innovation”David Mohr, PhD, Northwestern University and the Center for Behavioral Intervention Technologies
In celebration of CBITs' 10-Year Anniversary, our director David Mohr, PhD, and other core faculty in the center reflect on the growth of the field of digital mental health in the past decade and beyond.
David Mohr received his PhD in clinical psychology from the University of Arizona. He was on the faculty at the University of California, San Francisco from 1994 to 2006, when he moved to join the Department of Preventive Medicine at Northwestern University. He is the founder and director of the Center for Behavioral Intervention Technologies (CBITs). Mohr’s work focuses on the design and implementation of digital mental health treatments that fit into the fabric of people’s lives and can be sustainably implemented in real-world settings. His research integrates user-centered design processes to incorporate stakeholder input into the creation and evaluation of digital mental health services. He is also examining methods of harnessing sensor data from devices such as smartphones to identify behaviors, states, and environmental conditions, and using these to design digital mental health tools that are more effective and easier for people to use.
Also featuring talks from the following CBITs Core Faculty:
Rachel Kornfield, PhD
Jonah Meyerhoff, PhD
Kaylee Kruzan, PhD
Maia Jacobs, PhD
Ashley Knapp, PhD
Andrea Graham, PhD
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Saskia Kelders: “Engagement and personalization of Digital Mental Health interventions: can we overcome the one-size-fits-all approach?”Saskia Kelders, PhD., University of Twente, Netherlands // Centre for eHealth and Wellbeing Research
Saskia is Associate Professor at the Centre for eHealth and Wellbeing Research at the University of Twente, Enschede, the Netherlands and extraordinary professor at Optentia Research Focus Area, North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus. Her work combines technological and psychological perspectives and is multidisciplinary in nature. She uses innovative research designs and concepts to investigate the relationship between technology, adherence and effectiveness (e.g. fractional factorial RCT; engagement). Currently, she works on her personal NWO-Veni grant on using engagement as a mediator to personalize digital mental health interventions. In this innovative new research line, she uses new-to-field and challenging research methods (e.g. a full factorial study including 27 versions of an digital mental health intervention) by e.g. making smart use of the possibilities of technology. She is also editor of the new eHealth handbook with contributions from many influential (inter)national scholars, and lead educator of a massive open online course (MOOC) on eHealth with over 23.000 participants.
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April 2022: "Trustworthy passive data - excavating awareness and power in digital data research"Katie Shilton, PhD, MLS, University of Maryland, College Park // College of Information Studies
Katie Shilton is an associate professor in the College of Information Studies at the University of Maryland, College Park. Her research explores ethics and policy for the design of information technologies. She is the PI of the PERVADE project, a multi-campus collaboration focused on big data research ethics. Other projects include participatory design to support automated tools for online content moderators; tracing the influence of privacy discourse in the media and among policymakers; analyzing ethical cultures in computer security research; and understanding and encouraging ethics discussions in mobile application development. Her work has been supported by a Google Faculty Award and multiple awards from the U.S. National Science Foundation. Katie received a B.A. from Oberlin College, a Master of Library and Information Science from UCLA, and a Ph.D. in Information Studies from UCLA.
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March 2022: "Human-centered design of interventions and implementation strategies" Aaron Lyon, PhD, University of Washington Department of Psychiatry // UW ALACRITY Center
Aaron Lyon, PhD, (he/him) is a Professor in the University of Washington's (UW) Department of Psychiatry where he serves as Co-Director of the UW ALACRITY Center and the School Mental Health Assessment, Research, and Training (SMART) Center, both of which leverage methods from human-centered design to support effective implementation of evidence-based practices in mental and behavioral health. He is also the Director of the Research Institute for Implementation Science in Education (RIISE) and Associate Editor for the journal Implementation Research and Practice. Dr. Lyon's research focuses generally on increasing the accessibility, efficiency, and effectiveness of interventions for children, adolescents, and families.
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February 2022: Digital Mental Health Implementation - Perspectives from Healthcare, Payers, IndustryPanel discussion: Francisca Azocar, PhD (Optum Behavioral Health), Trina Histon, PhD (Kaiser Permanente), and Julia Hoffman, PsyD (Teladoc Health)
Dr. Francisca Azocar is a licensed clinical psychologist and mental health services researcher. As Vice President of Research and Evaluation at Optum Behavioral Health, she is responsible for the development of data-driven and clinically driven identification and stratification methods for behavioral case management and medical-behavioral integrated services. She is also responsible for vetting the clinical and research background of external vendors, including digital mental health apps to ensure fidelity to evidence-based practices, and demonstration of clinical and financial outcomes.
Dr. Trina Histon is a Senior Principal Consultant in Prevention, Wellness, and Digital Health at Kaiser Permanente's Care Management Institute. Trina has built an extensive career in addressing prevention, wellbeing, behavior change, and emotional health by translating evidence into practice in healthcare in Ireland and the USA. Trina is currently co-lead for Project Chamai (Greek for "grounded") which is deploying an ecosystem of digital mental health tools in Kaiser Permanente to support emotional wellness.
Dr. Julia Hoffman is a licensed clinical psychologist (CA) and head of clinical strategy, mental health for the company Teladoc Health. Dr. Hoffman has led the creation, evaluation, and broad international dissemination of numerous technology-based behavioral health tools. She founded and scaled mobile development for behavioral health at both the United States Department of Defense (DoD) and the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). A recognized thought leader at the intersection of digital and behavioral health, Modern Healthcare named Dr. Hoffman to the Top 25 Emerging Leaders program.
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January 2022: Transforming Mental Health Interventions: Smartphone apps and Beyond Sabine Wilhelm, PhD, Harvard Medical School
Sabine Wilhelm, PhD, is chief of Psychology and director of the Center for OCD and Related Disorders at Massachusetts General Hospital, where she is founder and chair of the Digital Health Think Tank in Psychiatry. A Harvard Medical School Professor, Dr. Wilhelm is recognized as a leading mental health researcher and her early work focused on the development and testing of new cognitive behavioral treatments for adults, adolescents and children suffering from obsessive compulsive disorder, tic disorders and body dysmorphic disorder. Her recent research focuses on the use of cutting-edge technology to improve and personalize mental health care for a range of mental health concerns. Dr. Wilhelm has over 300 publications, including seven books, and has given more than 255 lectures on these subjects. She has been successful in obtaining funding from the National Institutes of Health and other sources and was the former president for the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies. Dr. Wilhelm received many awards, including the Peter K. Ranney Innovation Award from the World Medical Innovation Forum for her presentation “Bridging the Mental Health Treatment Gap” as well as the Claflin Distinguished Scholar in Medicine Award. She is currently working on smartphone-based treatments for OCD, body dysmorphic disorder and depression. Her ultimate goal is to use technology-based interventions to enhance access to high quality mental health interventions globally.
Webinar Recording Unavailable. Please reach out to our speaker directly if you want more information on the talk.
December 2021: The VA National Center for PTSD Mobile Mental Health Program: Developing, Researching, and Disseminating Mobile Apps for Mental HealthEric Kuhn, PhD, National Center for PTSD, VA Palo Alto Health Care System // Clinical Associate Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine
Dr. Eric Kuhn received a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the University at Albany, State University of New York and completed a postdoctoral research fellowship at the VA Palo Alto MIRECC and Stanford University School of Medicine. He currently serves as a Clinical Psychologist at the Dissemination and Training Division of the National Center for PTSD and Clinical Associate Professor (affiliated) at Stanford University School of Medicine where he co-leads the Stanford Mental Health Technology and Innovation Hub. Dr. Kuhn is a founder of and leader in NCPTSD’s Mobile Mental Health Program, which has developed a suite of mobile apps designed to address PTSD and related comorbidities and currently directs the Center for Mobile Apps Research Resources and Services (CMARRS). Dr. Kuhn has federally funded programs of research focusing on using technology, both web and mobile, to increase access to and engagement in PTSD and related mental health care and to make care more patient centered, efficient, and effective.
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Click here to access a PDF copy of the presentation slides.
November 2021: Digital Mental Health and low-and-middle income countries: how far can we go?Professor Ricardo Araya, MD, Center for Global Mental Health, King’s College London, United Kingdom
Professor Araya's research interests include the aetiology of common mental disorders, inequalities and their link to the mental health of populations with special emphasis on international comparisons, and effective treatments for common mental disorders, such as simple and brief interventions using non-medical workers and strong community participation. Several of his current projects use technological platforms to support the delivery of mental health interventions. He is involved in projects in a large number of countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia. He has a special interest in projects that integrate mental health problems in the care of other diseases i.e. hypertension, diabetes, HIV and so on.
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October 2021: Employing Social Media to Improve Mental Health: Harnessing the Potentials and Avoiding the PitfallsMunmun De Choudhury, PhD, Georgia Tech School of Interactive Computing
Munmun De Choudhury, PhD, Georgia Tech School of Interactive Computing
Munmun De Choudhury is an Associate Professor of Interactive Computing at Georgia Tech. Dr. De Choudhury is best known for laying the foundation of a line of research that develops computational techniques to responsibly and ethically employ social media in understanding and improving our mental health. To do this work, she adopts a highly interdisciplinary approach, combining social computing, machine learning, and natural language analysis with insights and theories from the social, behavioral, and health sciences. Dr. De Choudhury has been recognized with the 2021 ACM-W Rising Star Award, 2019 Complex Systems Society – Junior Scientific Award, over a dozen best paper and honorable mention awards from the ACM and AAAI, and extensive coverage in popular press like the New York Times, the NPR, and the BBC. Earlier, Dr. De Choudhury was a faculty associate with the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard, a postdoc at Microsoft Research, and obtained her PhD in Computer Science from Arizona State University.
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September 2021: Is behavioral activation the "killer" app for mobile sensing?Nicholas B. Allen PhD, Ann Swindells Professor of Clinical Psychology, University of Oregon // Ksana Health Inc.
Nick Allen is the Ann Swindells Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Oregon, where he Director of Clinical Training. He is also the co-founder and CEO of Ksana Health Inc, a company whose mission is to use research evidence and modern technology to revolutionize the delivery of mental health care through remote behavioral monitoring and adaptive, continuous behavior change support. His research work has particularly focussed on understanding the interactions between multiple risk factors for adolescent onset mental health disorders, and to use these insights to develop innovative approaches to prevention and early intervention. He is the Director of the Center for Digital Mental Health, where his group holds multiple NIH funded grants for work focussing on the use of mobile and wearable technology to monitor risk for poor mental health outcomes including suicide, depression, and bipolar disorder. His group has developed software tools that combine active and passive sensing methods to provide intensive longitudinal assessment of behavior with minimal participant burden. The ultimate aim of these technologies, which are being developed through Ksana Health, is to develop a new generation of “just-in-time” behavioral interventions for early intervention and prevention of mental health problems.
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