Tag: digital mental health

Understanding Mental Ill-Health as Psychosocial Disability: Implications for Assistive Technology #ASSETS2019

Preview: Psychosocial disabilities can be found in a large portion of the world’s population and consist of different disabilities including mental ill-health such as depression and anxiety. Psychosocial disabilities has been widely understudied in assistive technology research, but there is a great potential for assistive technology to be able to support people with psychosocial disabilities. Our investigation draws on interviews conducted with 18 people who have complex health needs that include mental ill-health. This work highlights the potential role for assistive technology in support psychosocial disability outside of a clinical or medical framework.

What are psychosocial disabilities?

Anxiety, depression, and many mental health concerns can be categorized under psychosocial disabilities, therefore, recognizing the actual or perceived impairments these concerns create in daily life. Importantly, a large portion of the population (1 in 4 worldwide) have been diagnosed with a mental health condition. This does not even consider those who have not been formally diagnosed because they have not sought diagnosis or meet the “threshold” for clinical definitions. Therefore, people with psychosocial disabilities make up a large portion of the world population.

There are a number of issues surrounding psychosocial disabilities that we address in this paper. First, many psychosocial disabilities are experienced alongside physical disabilities. However, a holistic approach to supporting these disabilities is widely underdeveloped and understudied. Medical care, for example, is widely siloed for different disabilities and health conditions with treatment for physical and mental health concerns happening separately. Second, while disabled people often face issues such as stigma or oppression, for those with psychosocial disabilities these issues are complicated by the invisibility and unique history of mental illness and health. As a result, to this day, many people are hesitant to disclose their psychosocial disability and the severity of the impact of their disability. Third, for the field of assistive technology, there has generally been greater attention to physical disabilities than psychosocial disabilities. Our investigation draws on interviews conducted with 18 people with complex health needs (such as having diabetes, heart conditions, or cancer) along with mental health concerns. Our results suggest that mental health symptoms are disabling for these individuals, as they disrupt a number of valued activities and roles. In addition, these disruptions often recur over time, and may be mutually reinforced by physical health symptoms. Yet, despite the challenges of mental health concerns, many individuals avoided medicalizing their mental health symptoms or discussing them explicitly as “disabilities.”

Overview of Study Results

After interviewing participants in our study we found three themes: (1) disabling experience of personal health, (2) how they talk about their personal health, and (3) how they care for their mental ill-health.

Disabling Experiences of Personal Health

Disabling experiences from personal health concerns occurred for our participants across their lives, from both their physical and mental ill-health. Specifically, they had to plan around some of their mental health concerns in order to continue living their lives. For example, one participant knew they would not be doing anything too intensive or stressful during the month of February because they will be upset or depressed during that time.

Taken together, their physical and mental health impacted their experiences of disability, often impacting one another. For example, a participant who was having difficulty walking without an assistive device found the lack of exercise was impacting his depression to her detriment. Being able to use her rollator to go for daily walks helped lessen the disabling impact of her depression.

Talking about Personal Health

The way participants talked about their personal health differed depending on if they were discussing their physical health or mental health. Much of physical health experiences were discussed in a matter-of-fact manner. They used things such as diagnostic labels and they didn’t provide contextual information or circumstances around the physical health issues. In contrast, for mental ill-health experiences, they had a spectrum of ways of framing their concerns. Some did not take up the diagnostic labels. For example, they might describe some symptoms of depression but then insist they do not actually have depression. Others found that the context and circumstances influenced whether they had a specific diagnostic label. For example, they might only be anxious because of their financial situation and not otherwise have anxiety. Partially because of these framings, participants would wait until their mental ill-health was severe or quite disabling before seeking help. These framings and discourse around their mental ill-health also influenced who they would talk to about their mental health concerns. This appeared to be related to worries about issues such as stigma. Some participants were careful which friends and family members they discussed mental health concerns with, while others were even hesitant about discussion with certain medical health providers. Consistently, participants thought carefully about the consequences of disclosing.

Caring for Mental Ill-health

While participants varied in how they thought about and discussed their mental ill-health, they also varied in the ways they took care of themselves with regards to mental health. Because of the broader framing around health, many participants relied on the healthcare system to support and care for their psychosocial disabilities. Participants had a range in how they felt about medication, with some taking medication for mental ill-health and others not wanting to “cover up” their problems with medication.

However, beyond the medical healthcare system, participants all used other self-management practices to help with their psychosocial disabilities. They discussed a broad range of skills including exercise, being social, meditating using applications, posting reminders for themselves in frequented spaces, and cognitive exercises such as thought restructuring (a common therapeutic tool). They used these tools in order to be able to participate in their daily lives.

Neon sign that says "breathe"

Call-to-Action for Assistive Technology Community

Viewing the whole person beyond the medical context.

Our findings indicate that the complex co-occurring nature of physical and psychosocial disability should be recognized, such that ill-health is viewed holistically. Such an understanding requires health professionals to gather and understand rich contextual information about individuals, as would likely occur through recurrent, engaged contact in which individuals can share their personal experience of their physical and psychosocial disabilities. Assistive technologies could support this interaction by facilitating documentation of patterns and experiences occurring outside of health appointments, potentially contributing to care providers’ understanding of lived experiences of both mental and physical ill-health, and their interrelationship, and informing clinical conversations that are more person-centered and responsive to impairments in daily life.

Knowing that stigma may also be a barrier to these conversations, technologies could aim to empower individuals to speak about their psychosocial disability within the health system and more broadly. In the physical health domain, some research has explored how individuals with invisible disabilities manage demands to repeatedly disclose their disability, as well as how this might impact the design of assistive technology. For example, assistive technology may help disclose or partially disclose a disability in order to help a person gain access or get support from people around them as needed (such as business cards explaining a psychosocial disability). In addition, technologies could support individuals gaining skills and experience relevant to disclosing a psychosocial disability. For example, through simulations of conversations with health providers, or by facilitating peer-to-peer communication so that individuals gain positive initial disclosure experiences that empower them to disclose further.

Reframe research and design to match user experiences.

Given the variety of ways that individuals with psychosocial disability use and view labels, and the numerous factors that influence these framings, designers of assistive technology must be mindful of how resulting tools are introduced to people. Framing in terms of “wellness,” for example, rather than mental ill-health or psychosocial disability may increase acceptability. It will also be important to frame technologies such that they appeal to individuals when they are not actively symptomatic, but when they might nonetheless maintain their good health through self-management. Within this exploration of framing, there is opportunity to meet individuals with disabilities where they are and find language and labels that work for them, rather than adopting a top down application of labels common in medicine. Future research might more directly investigate how individuals make decisions about adopting labels related to psychosocial disabilities and mental health diagnoses.

Moving away from a solely medical model of psychosocial disabilities.

Within the assistive technology community, tools to support those with psychosocial disability are rare. However, within behavioral science, interest in the use of technological tools to support mental ill-health is rapidly expanding. Digital mental health is the use of information and communication technologies to improve mental health. However, the majority of digital mental health tools are developed to address mental health concerns from a medical perspective (that is, a focus on psychopathology and symptom control). By viewing technology through this purely medical lens, designers may overlook opportunities for technologies to enhance other aspects of people’s lives. In order to find common ground in medical and social research and design for people with disabilities, we propose bringing the medical and assistive technology communities together to learn from each other. Adopting a view informed by a psychosocial disability model may suggest different outcomes of concern, centering the experiences and values of the disabled individual.


Researchers in medical fields, such as behavioral health, have done a great deal of work in creating support, tools, and care for individuals with psychosocial disabilities. And, in fact, some assistive technology has been based directly off this work. However, more work can be done to help merge a social model view of psychosocial disability with this work in medicalized fields. With a social lens, creating assistive technology for people with psychosocial disabilities can be supportive, empowering, and will re-center people with disabilities, allowing their experiences to be the catalyst of technological change.

handicap sign on pavement, dirty from road

For more details about methods and results, please read the full paper.

Kathryn E. Ringland, Jennifer Nicholas, Rachel Kornfield, Emily G Lattie, David C. Mohr, and Madhu C. Reddy. 2019. “Understanding Mental Ill-health as Psychosocial Disability: Implications for Assistive Technology.” In Proceedings of ASSETS 2019. [PDF]

New Blog Post: The Fortress is for Everyone

ASCII map in Dwarf Fortress.

On March 13, 2019, the announcement that Dwarf fortress was coming to Stream and itch.io with graphics hit the web. Within 12 hours, the teaser trailer on YouTube amassed over 100,000 views. Dwarf Fortress is the “most incredible and impressive video game you’ve probably never played.” News spread across the internet that the creators, Zach and Tarn Adams, normally quite private about their personal lives, made the decision to release on commercial platforms to create a more stable source of revenue for themselves. Their reason? The need to be able to afford healthcare. Lack of access to affordable healthcare, and societal stigmas surrounding health, negatively impact people’s lives every day. With Zach and Tarn’s backing, we are writing a series of blog articles to help raise awareness about these issues.

To read more please visit my Medium page…

CSCW 2018 Recap

This week was CSCW 2018 – the conference about Computer Supported Collaborative Work. While I was there I attended workshops, panels, and paper presentations. I heard about a lot of great work happening in this space. I thought I would take a moment to recap some* of the things I heard about and learned while I was there. *Note: As my work pertains largely to Digital Mental Health, I’m going to focus on that for this short blog.

e Hudson River and the skyline of New York City.
View from conference venue in Jersey City. New York City skyline and the Hudson River.

Day 1: Workshops

On the first day, I attended a workshop on Conducting Research with Stigmatized Populations. For more information, be sure to check out the website. The discussions we had were thought-provoking. We discussed the ethical and moral responsibilities of researchers who work with stigmatized populations. The range of work covered health, working with youth, working with refugees, international work, gender diversity, and more. The most intriguing part of the workshop – and most encouraging – was how our different research interests and communities intersected and aligned. Stay tuned for more about this workshop.

Day 2: Workshops

The second day, I attended the workshop on Social Issues in Personal Informatics. In this workshops we discussed the intersection of social computing and personal informatics. Concerns such as how to deal with the messiness and complexity of people at the same time people are engaged in self-tracking (and being tracked) behavior. Again, stay tuned for more details about this soon.

Presentations on Mental Health

I attended several interesting paper presentations related to mental health. These included a session of papers around social support and care, which I will highlight here. I highly recommending checking out the rest of the CSCW program for more awesome papers.

The first paper in this section that I wanted to highlight was work being done in substance use. This was also a hot topic in both the workshops that I attended. I particularly like that they are using participatory design methods – in a very careful way in order to protect the participants – to get at better ways to help people in recovery.

Zachary Schmitt and Svetlana Yarosh. 2018. Participatory Design of Technologies to Support Recovery from Substance Use Disorders. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact. 2, CSCW, Article 156 (November 2018), 27 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3274425

This next paper is one that explores a model of social support for individuals with mental health concerns. This work really highlights the complexity of trying to design for individuals in this community.

Elizabeth L. Murnane, Tara G. Walker, Beck Tench, Stephen Voida, and Jaime Snyder. 2018. Personal Informatics in Interpersonal Contexts: Towards the Design of Technology that Supports the Social Ecologies of Long-Term Mental Health Management. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact.2, CSCW, Article 127 (November 2018), 27 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3274396

Finally, I wanted to highlight, this work being done in my own department here at Northwestern (before I arrived, of course). This work touches on how we as researchers interpret and understand content online. Sometimes we may see an image or a message and understand it to be one thing, when it is in fact another. This paper does a nice job of showing the relevance and importance of good, qualitative work. 

Jessica L. Feuston and Anne Marie Piper. 2018. Beyond the Coded Gaze: Analyzing Expression of Mental Health and Illness on Instagram. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact. 2, CSCW, Article 51 (November 2018), 21 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3274320

Paper Presentations on Health

There were some interesting health papers about fertility and pregnancy that I wanted to highlight. Even though they weren’t strictly about mental health, I found them compelling and easily related to a lot of the work I do.

Mayara Costa Figueiredo, Clara Caldeira, Elizabeth Victoria Eikey, Melissa Mazmanian, and Yunan Chen. 2018. Engaging with Health Data: The Interplay Between Self-Tracking Activities and Emotions in Fertility Struggles. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact. 2, CSCW, Article 40 (November 2018), 20 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3274309

I also appreciated the push to shift how medical services are rendered to women – shifting from fetus-centered healthcare to women-centered. This moves women to the center of their own care, away from simply being a vessel that grows a baby.

Xinning Gui, Yu Chen, Yubo Kou, Katie Pine, and Yunan Chen. 2017. Investigating Support Seeking from Peers for Pregnancy in Online Health Communities. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact. 1, CSCW, Article 50 (December 2017), 19 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3134685

Presentations on Youth

There were also lots of great papers on children and teens this year. I will just mention a couple here.

This first one was an intervention for children using a furry alien. There is a great blog post about it, so I’ll leave the details to the authors.

Petr Slovák, Nikki Theofanopoulou, Alessia Cecchet, Peter Cottrell, Ferran Altarriba Bertran, Ella Dagan, Julian Childs, and Katherine Isbister. 2018. “I just let him cry…: Designing Socio-Technical Interventions in Families to Prevent Mental Health Disorders. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact. 2, CSCW, Article 160 (November 2018), 34 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3274429

There was also a paper about risk to teens on the internet. The important take-away from this work is that the average teen will be exposed to risk on the internet, but instead of being overly-protective, we should be supporting their skill-building in coping. Our efforts should be focused on helping those teens who are more vulnerable to the risks (such as homeless youth or autistic teens).

Bridget Christine McHugh, Pamela J. Wisniewski, Mary Beth Rosson, Heng Xu, and John M. Carroll. 2017. Most Teens Bounce Back: Using Diary Methods to Examine How Quickly Teens Recover from Episodic Online Risk Exposure. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact. 1, CSCW, Article 76 (December 2017), 19 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3134711

Last but not least…

Finally, I don’t think I could conclude a blog of my recap of CSCW without a plug for the paper I helped co-author. Chris Wolf, who was first author of this work, presented. In this paper, we discuss the complexity of single-sign-on in dating applications. As data flows between multiple platforms, users must make judgments about what data is being put on social media platforms and  how these choices are made even more complex when access to one application requires feeding in data from another (e.g., must give Facebook access to Tinder).

Christine T. Wolf, Kathryn E. Ringland, Isley Gao, and Paul Dourish. 2018. Participating Through Data: Charting Relational Tensions in Multiplatform Data Flows. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact. 2, CSCW, Article 184 (November 2018), 17 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3274453

Conclusion

There were many other great papers presented, as well as panels, posters, and more! Of course, my favorite part of attending these conferences is meeting other researchers and geeking out about how work. I hope to see you at CSCW 2019!

A balcony rail in foreground, hudson river dark in middle, and night skyline of city in background.
New York City skyline at night from conference venue.


What is Digital Mental Health?

Our lives are becoming increasingly intertwined with digital technology. People and technology work in tandem to create the context in which we spend our daily lived experiences. We use technology to connect to one another, both in the workplace and during our recreational time. Not only are we using technology to better connect to one another, but also to be understand ourselves.

In the field of Human-Computer Interaction, there is a whole sub-field of ubiquitous computing or the study of computing technology being embedded throughout our lives and society. The ubiquity of technology has been leveraged to help people keep track of their health, in the workplace, and has been commercially very successful for recreational use (Pokemon Go, anyone?).

Looking down at a table top with a phone with headphones, tablet, glasses, laptop keyboard, camera, briefcase, and make up brushes.
Many of us carry around multiple devices on a daily basis.

An emerging field of research is Digital Mental Health, but what does that mean, exactly?

One area of interest is technology that supports (and/or treats) those looking to improve their mental health. This includes mental health apps for a mobile phone or website based care, for example. Technology will not necessarily replace traditional face-to-face therapies, but they could potentially augment them. A therapist might not always be readily available, but an app on a phone could be. Understanding the best way to design these apps is only beginning to be addressed by the research community.

Along the same lines is studying interventions that include technology in and for a clinical setting. This might include creating applications specific for a hospital setting or for out-patient groups. Another example might be building measures and treatments into a electronic medical record system. Users of these kinds of interventions would go beyond just thinking of a “patient” with mental health needs, but also doctors, nurses, and so on. One of the biggest hurdles here is the actual implementation of these tools – getting everyone in the system to actual adopt the technology, maintain it, and continue to use it so that it is effective.

A desk with note pads and pen, center a coffee mug, in front a blurry smartphone.

Additionally, understanding the problems that might arise in digital spaces that lead to mental health problems can fall under the purview of “digital mental health.” This might include exploring the potential of “addictive” technology or spending too much time in front of screens. Research in this area might also look at perceptions of technology and how that might impact their use (or abandonment). Further, using some kinds of technology, such as social media, has the potential to be detrimental to a person’s mental health. In my own research, I’ve found that interacting in digital spaces can open up individuals to harassment and bullying.

Finally, understanding how people are already using technology to support their mental health. This includes how people already use technology as tools to support themselves and their mental healthcare needs. Individuals interested in improving their mental health may be using technology in a variety of ways. This includes personal tracking, using other apps, and connecting with others via social media.

© 2024 Kate Ringland, PhD

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