Mental Health
Mental-health clinicians can use the Mobile Therapy app to keep tabs on patients between sessions.
The app uses self-reports, linguistic analysis, and smartphone sensors to gather information about the patient’s feelings, behaviors, movements, and interactions with other people.
A California-based company is giving mental health clinicians a means of managing patients between office visits – and charging for those interventions.
SelfEcho’s Mobile Therapy platform gathers information through short, custom-designed smartphone questionnaires answered by the patient throughout the day…
Mental health clinicians now have the option to become mobile therapists with alerts to intervene in between therapy visits when using Mobile Therapy, www.mobiletherapy.com, a mobile and web-based platform that collects client data via smartphone sensors and experience sampling to improve care. The system now also provides clinicians with the ability to charge clients for the concierge-style service of using Mobile Therapy …
Say you only meet with your therapist once a week, which is probably average for people who are actively in therapy. Well, a lot can go on in a week. How many of us can remember what we had for lunch yesterday, let alone how we were feeling on Wednesday versus Thursday and what contributing factors might have been in place at that time. Mobile Therapy was created because human memory is inherently fallible…
The runner up in the Tech Cocktail Startup Celebration Pitch Competition was Mobile Therapy, which empowers mental health clinicians to deliver better outcomes by tracking clients’ well-being in between therapy visits…
The team behind Santa Barbara-based startup SelfEcho is betting that big data can help us better understand ourselves. Last month it released an app called Mobile Therapy that charts users’ emotional state by harvesting smartphone information to give therapists a clearer picture of their patients’ well-being between therapy visits. Since going live last November, 200 clinicians across the U.S. have subscribed to the $50-a-month service.
Therapists now have the ability to track their patients’ progress between therapy visits with Mobile Therapy, a recently launched web-based dashboard and mobile application, one researcher told Healio Psychiatry.
A mobile app being pilot tested could help physicians and mental health professionals keep tabs on the well-being of patients with depression, anxiety, stress and behavioral disorders between visits.
A technology company is looking for clinicians to take part in a pilot study of its mobile therapist app that uses remote patient monitoring to give psychologists a better understanding of their patients emotional health between appointments…
Mobile apps and telehealth will never replace in-person treatment, but new tech tools can help millions who suffer from mental health conditions. Consider these apps and services.
“According to the recent national survey conducted by Sigma Research, mental healthcare professionals are ready to adopt new mobile technologies that can bridge data gaps to improve therapy practice.”