With the new year fast approaching, you may be thinking about ways to improve your overall health, or mental health in particular. Lucky for you, there are literally thousands of mobile apps that can help, from the privacy of your own home and with little to no cost.
But where do you even start? With so many apps to choose from, how can you decide which one is right for you? You could check out Calm, an app for mindfulness and meditation, which Apple just named its App of the Year. Or there’s Reset, which in September, was approved by the FDA as the first app for treating substance abuse. You may have heard of Happify, a popular app promising to bring you effective tools that help with stress, anxiety or depression. Or there’s Talkspace if you prefer to communicate with a licensed therapist through texting, voice or video calls.
That’s four apps to consider; only about 9,996 to go.
Experts believe there are over 10,000 mental health apps in existence — a number that has exploded in the past few years and will likely keep growing. The boom is exciting in its potential to address a longtime dearth in mental health resources and by helping bring attention to the issue more broadly.
Yet much of the mobile app landscape is new and mental health experts point to a lack of research. That leaves both patients and practitioners in a bit of bind when trying to figure out which apps are most effective.
“Ninety-five to 99 percent of mental health apps have no direct research behind them,” said Dr. Stephen Schueller, faculty member at Northwestern’s Center for Behavioral Intervention Technologies and executive director of PsyberGuide, a non-profit that identifies and reviews mental health apps.
A big part of the reason, Schueller explained, is a “commercialization gap”: The people who know how to develop research trials don’t necessarily have the skills or interest in commercializing an app, while app developers who have an enormous interest in doing so probably lack the skills or resources to set up research trials. The app market doesn’t care either way; makers of mental health apps don’t have to provide research showing that their products work or are even safe.
So, does all this mean that most mental health apps are garbage? Not at all, said Schueller. “The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence,” he explained. “It’s possible that people are coming up with clever ideas to translate things we know about mental health into smooth applications that just haven’t been tested yet.”
Still, the lack of research does mean that people should be on the lookout for a few key factors before committing to any particular mental health app.
Decisions, decisions: What to keep in mind when looking for a mental health app
The American Psychiatric Association has developed a hierarchical order of criteria to help people decide on the best mental health apps for them. In this model, the first and most important factor is whether the app safeguards medical information — something most people probably assume is required of anything having to do with mental health. Surprisingly, few apps take privacy into account.
“A lot of these apps are very careful to live outside of federal privacy law, like HIPAA,” said Dr. John Torous, who chaired the APA’s Smartphone App Evaluation Work Group. “A lot of times, apps don’t have privacy policies. And most that do say that data can be sold, marketed, stored or shared. If people are saying, ‘I’m depressed and thinking of suicide,’ these are things you hope would be protected, but a majority of apps are doing the opposite.”
Assuming you’ve checked out an app’s privacy policy and are okay with it, the next thing the APA recommends is looking into whether there is any evidence of effectiveness. As already noted, usually there isn’t. But in some cases, there’s evidence that an app will instead cause you harm.
In a 2014 study, for example, a team of Swedish researchers found that an app aimed at reducing risky drinking by providing a real-time estimated blood alcohol concentration was, in fact, associated with a significant increase in the frequency of drinking among university students. “We can only speculate,” the researchers wrote in their paper, “that app users may have felt more confident that they could rely on the app to reduce negative effects of drinking and therefore felt able to drink more often.”
If an app’s privacy policy and evidence of effectiveness are to your liking, the next question to ask yourself is whether it’s something you can use and stick with, according to the APA. If you only use it once, the app really has no value.









