1. A Therapeutic Relational Agent for Reducing Problematic Substance Use (Woebot): Development and Usability Study
- Author
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Prochaska, Judith J, Vogel, Erin A, Chieng, Amy, Kendra, Matthew, Baiocchi, Michael, Pajarito, Sarah, and Robinson, Athena
- Subjects
Depression ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Alcoholism ,Artificial Intelligence ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Female ,Humans ,Substance-Related Disorders ,artificial intelligence ,conversational agent ,chatbot ,addiction ,substance misuse ,treatment ,acceptability ,feasibility ,craving ,psychoeducation ,psychotherapeutic ,mobile phone ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Medical Informatics - Abstract
BackgroundMisuse of substances is common, can be serious and costly to society, and often goes untreated due to barriers to accessing care. Woebot is a mental health digital solution informed by cognitive behavioral therapy and built upon an artificial intelligence-driven platform to deliver tailored content to users. In a previous 2-week randomized controlled trial, Woebot alleviated depressive symptoms.ObjectiveThis study aims to adapt Woebot for the treatment of substance use disorders (W-SUDs) and examine its feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy.MethodsAmerican adults (aged 18-65 years) who screened positive for substance misuse without major health contraindications were recruited from online sources and flyers and enrolled between March 27 and May 6, 2020. In a single-group pre/postdesign, all participants received W-SUDs for 8 weeks. W-SUDs provided mood, craving, and pain tracking and modules (psychoeducational lessons and psychotherapeutic tools) using elements of dialectical behavior therapy and motivational interviewing. Paired samples t tests and McNemar nonparametric tests were used to examine within-subject changes from pre- to posttreatment on measures of substance use, confidence, cravings, mood, and pain.ResultsThe sample (N=101) had a mean age of 36.8 years (SD 10.0), and 75.2% (76/101) of the participants were female, 78.2% (79/101) were non-Hispanic White, and 72.3% (73/101) were employed. Participants' W-SUDs use averaged 15.7 (SD 14.2) days, 12.1 (SD 8.3) modules, and 600.7 (SD 556.5) sent messages. About 94% (562/598) of all completed psychoeducational lessons were rated positively. From treatment start to end, in-app craving ratings were reduced by half (87/101, 86.1% reporting cravings in the app; odds ratio 0.48, 95% CI 0.32-0.73). Posttreatment assessment completion was 50.5% (51/101), with better retention among those who initially screened higher on substance misuse. From pre- to posttreatment, confidence to resist urges to use substances significantly increased (mean score change +16.9, SD 21.4; P
- Published
- 2021