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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 91porn视频.Helping Kids Manage Anxiety鈥擶ith an App
According to the , anxiety is the most common mental health concern in the United States and also tends to start early in life, often leading to depression, substance abuse and other mental health problems.
Pitt researchers have developed a tool that helps kids and adolescents better manage their anxiety. And now, they鈥檙e working with Pitt鈥檚 , local pediatrics offices and schools to make it widely available to the public.
Mr. Rogers' legacy: Commitment to child development
Decades ago,聽Fred Rogers went on TV and began helping聽children understand and tak about their feelings聽in a way that was unusual for its time.
For Pitt researchers Jennifer Silk and Bambang Parmanto, a desire to help today's kids resulted in 聽a smartphone-enhanced child anxiety treatment鈥斺渁聽therapist in your pocket,鈥 as Parmanto describes it.
The SmartCAT聽project聽is just one example of how聽Pitt researchers and educators are representing the commitment to child development聽that Rogers espoused.
"Our work continues on Mr. Rogers' basic聽theme of caring for children鈥檚 feelings,鈥 Silk said.
Read more about the in PItt聽Med magazine.
, or, smartphone-enhanced child anxiety treatment, is a mobile health app designed to make treatment for anxiety disorders in children more effective and more efficient. It comes with an integrated clinician portal that allows patients to share their progress with their doctor.
Currently, cognitive behavioral therapy, or CBT, is a respected standard treatment for all types of anxiety, including generalized, separation and social anxiety. It works by having a therapist and patient work together on restructuring negative or intrusive thought patterns鈥攆irst by identifying them, figuring out their triggers and then working up to actually changing the patient鈥檚 thinking through lived experiences or practicing exposures.
鈥淲e find that actually doing these exposures and facing your fears is what鈥檚 most effective in helping children and teenagers, as well as adults, get over their anxiety,鈥 said , professor of at Pitt and the lead investigator behind SmartCAT.
Studies have shown over the years that CBT is about 60 percent effective in treating anxiety颅鈥攂ut that still leaves about 40 percent of kids that don鈥檛 get better, 鈥渒ind of suggesting that some kids need a little bit more,鈥 said Silk, who is also a licensed clinical child psychologist.
So to augment the traditional course of CBT, they developed SmartCAT.
In addition to working to address the needs of the 40 percent of children who don鈥檛 improve, SmartCAT鈥檚 aims include mitigating two other factors that make standard CBT for anxiety challenging for some, Silk said. These factors are the typical need for 12-16 weeks of therapy, which can be tricky for busy families; and the lack of available, trained therapists in the community, which聽can lead to long wait lists and over-booked or unavailable clinicians.
Silk and , professor and chair of in the , wanted to address these challenges while at the same time democratizing access to CBT.
鈥淥ur thinking was if we get kids practicing these skills that they鈥檙e learning in treatment on their phones every day, eventually even doing the exposures at home using the app, they could get better faster and more fully,鈥 and shorten wait lists for therapists in the community, Silk said.
Earlier this year, Silk and a team published a paper showing that kids with anxiety who were successfully treated with CBT between ages 9 and 14 were less likely to have symptoms of depression鈥攁nd fewer of them鈥攜ears later.
Based on these findings, the app was designed for kids in late elementary to early high school, though that range could be expanded in the future, Silk said.
They did an open clinical trial in the University. Children and teens with anxiety received half the number of standard CBT sessions typically offered鈥攅ight compared to 16鈥攂ut also used the SmartCAT app on their phones to practice skills on their own at home. The results were encouraging: 69%聽of kids no longer met criteria for an anxiety disorder at the end of treatment鈥攁 better outcome than the clinical standard of 60%, even with half as many sessions. The study was .
Why it matters
As social and academic pressures build throughout life, the things people struggle with also become more significant. 鈥淲e really want to give kids the skills to master coping with their anxiety before those things become so challenging,鈥 Silk said, especially in the current global political and environmental climate, which is contributing to rising rates of anxiety worldwide.
One feature of the app, developed by Parmanto and doctoral student Gede Pramana, is that it can be programmed to launch in a certain place with GPS tracking. So, if a child has anxiety around school shootings, for example, SmartCAT can launch one of its four skill-building games or the coaching module to help them through the school day as needed, while being quieter at home.
Other apps out there are designed to help kids manage their anxiety. But SmartCAT is 鈥渆nhanced, evidence-based therapy,鈥 said Parmanto. 鈥淚t鈥檚 telemedicine, actually. A way of delivering care over a distance.鈥 A clinician portal allows the doctor to engage, send secure messaging and monitor their patient鈥檚 progress.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 why the results are better,鈥 said Parmanto. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a therapist in your pocket, enforcing what you do in a clinic, every day at home. A smartphone is with you all the time. If I want to know how anxious you are, it鈥檚 much more accurate if I asses it right there and then, in the moment it鈥檚 happening, than if you wait a few days for your appointment to tell me about it. Mobile health technology lets us assess patient condition and deliver therapy in the same moment.鈥
What鈥檚 happening now
Silk and the team were encouraged by SmartCAT鈥檚 success during the research period, but, she said, 鈥渨hat I really wanted to know was, can this work in the real world?鈥
One critical element? Reaching more kids. 鈥淓ven though anxiety affects about one in six kids, fewer than 20%聽of anxious kids ever get any kind of treatment,鈥 Silk said.
Pediatrics offices and schools seemed a good place to start, and convenient for families, the researchers decided.
Right now, they鈥檙e making SmartCAT available on Apple鈥攊t was developed for Android.聽With help from the Innovation Institute, they鈥檙e in the process of licensing the app to a company that will be able to provide long-term tech support, making it widely available to the public.
鈥淚鈥檝e had colleagues reaching out to me asking when they can download it for their kids,鈥 said Parmanto. But before that can happen, there鈥檚 a bit more research to be done.
This fall, supported by a 聽as well as outside funding, they鈥檙e rolling out the app in selected pediatrics offices around Pittsburgh.
At the same time, another grant through Pitt鈥檚 is helping the team collaborate across units within the University. The psychology department, and are teaming up to train master of social work students who want to specialize in child mental health on using the abbreviated CBT protocol with SmartCAT, and implementing the intervention in a local Pittsburgh middle school.
Larger randomized trials in the community are on the horizon. But eventually, Silk hopes to scale the project up 91porn视频ally. She sees the potential for better, stronger, longer-lasting outcomes for kids struggling with anxiety that could have lasting positive impacts much further down the line in the life and mental health journey of so many individuals.聽聽