Effects on voice hearing distress and social functioning of unguided application of a smartphone app — A randomized controlled trial

Alyssa Jongeneel*, Philippe Delespaul, Nynke Tromp, Dorien Scheffers, Berber van der Vleugel, Paul de Bont, Martijn Kikkert, Carlos F. Croes, Anton B.P. Staring, Heleen Riper, Mark van der Gaag, David van den Berg

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Temstem is a smartphone app developed with and for clinical voice hearing individuals with the aim to reduce their voice hearing distress and improve social functioning. Methods: A randomized controlled trial with adult outpatients suffering from distressing and frequent auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) was conducted. Participants were randomized to unguided ‘Temstem+AVH monitoring’ or unguided ‘AVH monitoring only’ (control condition). Assessments were performed at baseline, post-intervention (week 5–6), and follow-up (week 9–10). Primary outcomes were voice hearing distress and social functioning, as measured with Experience Sampling Method (ESM), consisting of multiple daily questionnaires during six days. In addition, voices and mood were self-monitored with help of a daily reflective questionnaire. Analyses were linear regression models (intention-to-treat). Results: 44 Participants were allocated to Temstem and 45 to the control condition. No significant differences between the groups were found on both primary outcomes. Conclusion: Our results do not support the effectiveness of stand-alone use of Temstem versus symptom monitoring on voice hearing distress or social functioning in voice hearing individuals. In order to potentially improve effectiveness of an mHealth tool in a population of people with frequent and distressing voices, we recommend to involve persons with lived experience in all stages of development and research; to thoroughly test the (technological) usability before performing an RCT; to test whether guidance of a therapist is needed to optimize effectiveness; and to provide prompts to remind the user to actually use the tool.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100717
Pages (from-to)1-9
Number of pages9
JournalInternet Interventions
Volume35
Early online date26 Jan 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors

Funding

The Temstem trial was funded by a grant awarded to DvdB and MvdG by the ‘ Innovatie Platform Parnassia ’ (Monsterseweg 93, 2553 RJ Den Haag), and this project received financial support of the Amsterdam UMC , department of Clinical Psychology.

FundersFunder number
Innovatie Platform Parnassia

    Keywords

    • Auditory verbal hallucinations
    • ESM
    • Mhealth
    • Psychosis
    • Voice hearing
    • Voices

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