Published on in Vol 5, No 1 (2018): Jan-Mar

Acceptability, Use, and Safety of a Mobile Phone App (BlueIce) for Young People Who Self-Harm: Qualitative Study of Service Users’ Experience

Acceptability, Use, and Safety of a Mobile Phone App (BlueIce) for Young People Who Self-Harm: Qualitative Study of Service Users’ Experience

Acceptability, Use, and Safety of a Mobile Phone App (BlueIce) for Young People Who Self-Harm: Qualitative Study of Service Users’ Experience

Authors of this article:

Rebecca Grist1 Author Orcid Image ;   Joanna Porter2 Author Orcid Image ;   Paul Stallard1, 2 Author Orcid Image

Journals

  1. Chan S, Li L, Torous J, Gratzer D, Yellowlees P. Review of Use of Asynchronous Technologies Incorporated in Mental Health Care. Current Psychiatry Reports 2018;20(10) View
  2. Vo V, Auroy L, Sarradon-Eck A. Patients’ Perceptions of mHealth Apps: Meta-Ethnographic Review of Qualitative Studies. JMIR mHealth and uHealth 2019;7(7):e13817 View
  3. Gindidis S, Stewart S, Roodenburg J. Psychologists’ motivations for integrating apps into therapy with secondary school-aged young people. Journal of Psychologists and Counsellors in Schools 2020;30(1):2 View
  4. Herring A, Craven M, Mughal F, Rawsthorne M, Rees K, Walker L, Wolpert M. Potential of using visual imagery to revolutionise measurement of emotional health. Archives of Disease in Childhood 2020;105(7):690 View
  5. McCashin D, Coyle D, O'Reilly G. Qualitative Synthesis of Young People’s Experiences With Technology-Assisted Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: Systematic Review. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2019;21(11):e13540 View
  6. Edbrooke-Childs J, Edridge C, Averill P, Delane L, Hollis C, Craven M, Martin K, Feltham A, Jeremy G, Deighton J, Wolpert M. A Feasibility Trial of Power Up: Smartphone App to Support Patient Activation and Shared Decision Making for Mental Health in Young People. JMIR mHealth and uHealth 2019;7(6):e11677 View
  7. Hornsby N, Blom L, Sengoelge M. Psychosocial Interventions Targeting Recovery in Child and Adolescent Burns: A Systematic Review. Journal of Pediatric Psychology 2019 View
  8. Miralles I, Granell C, Díaz-Sanahuja L, Van Woensel W, Bretón-López J, Mira A, Castilla D, Casteleyn S. Smartphone Apps for the Treatment of Mental Disorders: Systematic Review. JMIR mHealth and uHealth 2020;8(4):e14897 View
  9. Crosby L, Bonnington O. Experiences and implications of smartphone apps for depression and anxiety. Sociology of Health & Illness 2020;42(4):925 View
  10. Punukollu M, Leighton E, Brooks A, Heron S, Mitchell F, Regener P, Karagiorgou O, Bell C, Gilmour M, Moya N, Sharpe H, Minnis H. SafeSpot: an innovative app and mental health support package for Scottish schools – a qualitative analysis as part of a mixed methods study. Child and Adolescent Mental Health 2020;25(2):110 View
  11. Forte A, Sarli G, Polidori L, Lester D, Pompili M. The Role of New Technologies to Prevent Suicide in Adolescence: A Systematic Review of the Literature. Medicina 2021;57(2):109 View
  12. Muscara F, Ng O, Crossley L, Lu S, Kalisch L, Melvin G, Gronow S, Prakash C, Anderson V. The feasibility of using smartphone apps to manage self-harm and suicidal acts in adolescents admitted to an inpatient mental health ward. DIGITAL HEALTH 2020;6:205520762097531 View
  13. Tighe J, Shand F, McKay K, Mcalister T, Mackinnon A, Christensen H. Usage and Acceptability of the iBobbly App: Pilot Trial for Suicide Prevention in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Youth. JMIR Mental Health 2020;7(12):e14296 View
  14. Kruzan K, Whitlock J, Bazarova N. Examining the Relationship Between the Use of a Mobile Peer-Support App and Self-Injury Outcomes: Longitudinal Mixed Methods Study. JMIR Mental Health 2021;8(1):e21854 View
  15. Cliffe B, Tingley J, Greenhalgh I, Stallard P. mHealth Interventions for Self-Harm: Scoping Review. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2021;23(4):e25140 View
  16. Čuš A, Edbrooke-Childs J, Ohmann S, Plener P, Akkaya-Kalayci T. “Smartphone Apps Are Cool, But Do They Help Me?”: A Qualitative Interview Study of Adolescents’ Perspectives on Using Smartphone Interventions to Manage Nonsuicidal Self-Injury. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2021;18(6):3289 View
  17. Knapp A, Cohen K, Nicholas J, Mohr D, Carlo A, Skerl J, Lattie E. Integration of Digital Tools Into Community Mental Health Care Settings That Serve Young People: Focus Group Study. JMIR Mental Health 2021;8(8):e27379 View
  18. Simonsson O, Engberg H, Bjureberg J, Ljótsson B, Stensils J, Sahlin H, Hellner C. Experiences of an Online Treatment for Adolescents With Nonsuicidal Self-injury and Their Caregivers: Qualitative Study. JMIR Formative Research 2021;5(7):e17910 View
  19. Braciszewski J. Digital Technology for Suicide Prevention. Advances in Psychiatry and Behavioral Health 2021;1(1):53 View
  20. Bates K, Morgan H, Crosby E, Nurse K, Flynn A, Stern D, Baronian R, Kennedy E. Developing digital approaches for adolescents and young adults with autism and learning disabilities: Tools to facilitate access and shared decision-making. Educational and Child Psychology 2021;38(3):124 View
  21. Hill C, Reardon T, Taylor L, Creswell C. Online Support and Intervention for Child Anxiety (OSI): Development and Usability Testing. JMIR Formative Research 2022;6(4):e29846 View
  22. Cliffe B, Moore E, Whittle K, Stallard P. The acceptability, safety, and effects of a smartphone application for university students who self-harm: an open study (Preprint). JMIR Formative Research 2022 View
  23. Cliffe B, Stokes Z, Stallard P. The Acceptability of a Smartphone App (BlueIce) for University Students Who Self-harm. Archives of Suicide Research 2023;27(2):565 View
  24. Kruzan K, Reddy M, Washburn J, Mohr D. Developing a Mobile App for Young Adults with Nonsuicidal Self-Injury: A Prototype Feedback Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2022;19(23):16163 View
  25. Núñez D, Gaete J, Meza D, Andaur J, Robinson J. Testing the Effectiveness of a Blended Intervention to Reduce Suicidal Ideation among School Adolescents in Chile: A Protocol for a Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2022;19(7):3947 View
  26. Kruzan K, Whitlock J, Bazarova N, Bhandari A, Chapman J. Use of a Mobile Peer Support App Among Young People With Nonsuicidal Self-injury: Small-scale Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Formative Research 2022;6(1):e26526 View
  27. Greenhalgh I, Tingley J, Taylor G, Medina-Lara A, Rhodes S, Stallard P. Beating Adolescent Self-Harm (BASH): a randomised controlled trial comparing usual care versus usual care plus a smartphone self-harm prevention app (BlueIce) in young adolescents aged 12–17 who self-harm: study protocol. BMJ Open 2021;11(11):e049859 View
  28. Sarubbi S, Rogante E, Erbuto D, Cifrodelli M, Sarli G, Polidori L, Lester D, Berardelli I, Pompili M. The Effectiveness of Mobile Apps for Monitoring and Management of Suicide Crisis: A Systematic Review of the Literature. Journal of Clinical Medicine 2022;11(19):5616 View
  29. Pichikov A, Popov Y. Problems with Suicidal Behavior Prevention in Adolescents: a Narrative Literature Review. Consortium Psychiatricum 2022;3(2):5 View
  30. Chen E, Muessig K, Moracco K. Understanding the Acceptability of Health Apps among Adolescents: A Qualitative Study. ACI Open 2022;06(02):e103 View
  31. Newton A, March S, Gehring N, Rowe A, Radomski A. Establishing a Working Definition of User Experience for eHealth Interventions of Self-reported User Experience Measures With eHealth Researchers and Adolescents: Scoping Review. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2021;23(12):e25012 View
  32. Six S, Byrne K, Aly H, Harris M. The Effect of Mental Health App Customization on Depressive Symptoms in College Students: Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Mental Health 2022;9(8):e39516 View
  33. Kruzan K, Whitlock J, Chapman J, Bhandari A, Bazarova N. Young Adults’ Perceptions of 2 Publicly Available Digital Resources for Self-injury: Qualitative Study of a Peer Support App and Web-Based Factsheets. JMIR Formative Research 2023;7:e41546 View
  34. Kruzan K, Mohr D, Reddy M. How Technologies Can Support Self-Injury Self-Management: Perspectives of Young Adults With Lived Experience of Nonsuicidal Self-Injury. Frontiers in Digital Health 2022;4 View
  35. Martiniuk A, Toepfer A, Lane-Brown A. A review of risks, adverse effects and mitigation strategies when delivering mental health services using telehealth. Journal of Mental Health 2023:1 View
  36. Shin H, Durocher K, Sequeira L, Zaheer J, Torous J, Strudwick G. Information and communication technology-based interventions for suicide prevention implemented in clinical settings: a scoping review. BMC Health Services Research 2023;23(1) View
  37. KABADAYI F, GÜVEN M. Psikolojik Yardım Hizmetlerindeki Mobil Uygulamalarla İlgili Bir İnceleme. Türk Eğitim Bilimleri Dergisi 2023;21(3):1660 View
  38. Luo M, Yue Y, Du N, Xiao Y, Chen C, Huan Z. Needs for mobile and internet-based psychological intervention in patients with self-injury and suicide-related behaviors: a qualitative systematic review. BMC Psychiatry 2024;24(1) View
  39. Guerrero E, Andreasson K, Larsen L, Buus N, Skovgaard Larsen J, Krogh J, Thastum R, Lindberg L, Lindblad K, Erlangsen A, Nordentoft M. Zero Self-Harm app: a mobile phone application to reduce non-suicidal self-injury—study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials 2024;25(1) View
  40. Rheinberger D, Baffsky R, McGillivray L, Z Q Gan D, Larsen M, Torok M. Digital therapeutics in the hospital for suicide crisis – content and design recommendations from young people and hospital staff. DIGITAL HEALTH 2024;10 View
  41. Cliffe B, Moore E, Whittle K, Stallard P. Is a smartphone application (BlueIce) acceptable and safe for university students who self-harm: an open study. BMJ Open 2024;14(4):e069862 View
  42. Stallard P, Whittle K, Moore E, Medina-Lara A, Morrish N, Cliffe B, Rhodes S, Taylor G. Clinical effectiveness and safety of adding a self-harm prevention app (BlueIce) to specialist mental health care for adolescents who repeatedly self-harm: A single blind randomised controlled trial (the BASH study). Psychiatry Research 2024;339:116017 View
  43. Stallard P, Whittle K, Moore E, Medina-Lara A, Morrish N, Rhodes S, Taylor G, Cliffe B. Acceptability, use and safety of the BlueIce self-harm prevention app: qualitative findings from the Beating Adolescent Self-Harm (BASH) randomised controlled trial. BMJ Mental Health 2024;27(1):e300961 View

Books/Policy Documents

  1. Clifton J, Domar A. Fertility, Pregnancy, and Wellness. View
  2. Strauss J, Zhang J, Jarrett M, Patterson B, Van Ameringen M. Mental Health in a Digital World. View