Quantifying App Store Dynamics: Longitudinal Tracking of Mental Health Apps

BackgroundFor many mental health conditions, mobile health apps offer the ability to deliver information, support, and intervention outside the clinical setting. However, there are difficulties with the use of a commercial app store to distribute health care resources, includ...

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Main Authors: Larsen, Mark Erik, Nicholas, Jennifer, Christensen, Helen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2016-08-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/3/e96/
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spelling doaj-039acc15c6c44aea996ddb7d9f31b5382021-05-03T03:33:01ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222016-08-0143e9610.2196/mhealth.6020Quantifying App Store Dynamics: Longitudinal Tracking of Mental Health AppsLarsen, Mark ErikNicholas, JenniferChristensen, Helen BackgroundFor many mental health conditions, mobile health apps offer the ability to deliver information, support, and intervention outside the clinical setting. However, there are difficulties with the use of a commercial app store to distribute health care resources, including turnover of apps, irrelevance of apps, and discordance with evidence-based practice. ObjectiveThe primary aim of this study was to quantify the longevity and rate of turnover of mental health apps within the official Android and iOS app stores. The secondary aim was to quantify the proportion of apps that were clinically relevant and assess whether the longevity of these apps differed from clinically nonrelevant apps. The tertiary aim was to establish the proportion of clinically relevant apps that included claims of clinical effectiveness. We performed additional subgroup analyses using additional data from the app stores, including search result ranking, user ratings, and number of downloads. MethodsWe searched iTunes (iOS) and the Google Play (Android) app stores each day over a 9-month period for apps related to depression, bipolar disorder, and suicide. We performed additional app-specific searches if an app no longer appeared within the main search ResultsOn the Android platform, 50% of the search results changed after 130 days (depression), 195 days (bipolar disorder), and 115 days (suicide). Search results were more stable on the iOS platform, with 50% of the search results remaining at the end of the study period. Approximately 75% of Android and 90% of iOS apps were still available to download at the end of the study. We identified only 35.3% (347/982) of apps as being clinically relevant for depression, of which 9 (2.6%) claimed clinical effectiveness. Only 3 included a full citation to a published study. ConclusionsThe mental health app environment is volatile, with a clinically relevant app for depression becoming unavailable to download every 2.9 days. This poses challenges for consumers and clinicians seeking relevant and long-term apps, as well as for researchers seeking to evaluate the evidence base for publicly available apps.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/3/e96/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Larsen, Mark Erik
Nicholas, Jennifer
Christensen, Helen
spellingShingle Larsen, Mark Erik
Nicholas, Jennifer
Christensen, Helen
Quantifying App Store Dynamics: Longitudinal Tracking of Mental Health Apps
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Larsen, Mark Erik
Nicholas, Jennifer
Christensen, Helen
author_sort Larsen, Mark Erik
title Quantifying App Store Dynamics: Longitudinal Tracking of Mental Health Apps
title_short Quantifying App Store Dynamics: Longitudinal Tracking of Mental Health Apps
title_full Quantifying App Store Dynamics: Longitudinal Tracking of Mental Health Apps
title_fullStr Quantifying App Store Dynamics: Longitudinal Tracking of Mental Health Apps
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying App Store Dynamics: Longitudinal Tracking of Mental Health Apps
title_sort quantifying app store dynamics: longitudinal tracking of mental health apps
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2016-08-01
description BackgroundFor many mental health conditions, mobile health apps offer the ability to deliver information, support, and intervention outside the clinical setting. However, there are difficulties with the use of a commercial app store to distribute health care resources, including turnover of apps, irrelevance of apps, and discordance with evidence-based practice. ObjectiveThe primary aim of this study was to quantify the longevity and rate of turnover of mental health apps within the official Android and iOS app stores. The secondary aim was to quantify the proportion of apps that were clinically relevant and assess whether the longevity of these apps differed from clinically nonrelevant apps. The tertiary aim was to establish the proportion of clinically relevant apps that included claims of clinical effectiveness. We performed additional subgroup analyses using additional data from the app stores, including search result ranking, user ratings, and number of downloads. MethodsWe searched iTunes (iOS) and the Google Play (Android) app stores each day over a 9-month period for apps related to depression, bipolar disorder, and suicide. We performed additional app-specific searches if an app no longer appeared within the main search ResultsOn the Android platform, 50% of the search results changed after 130 days (depression), 195 days (bipolar disorder), and 115 days (suicide). Search results were more stable on the iOS platform, with 50% of the search results remaining at the end of the study period. Approximately 75% of Android and 90% of iOS apps were still available to download at the end of the study. We identified only 35.3% (347/982) of apps as being clinically relevant for depression, of which 9 (2.6%) claimed clinical effectiveness. Only 3 included a full citation to a published study. ConclusionsThe mental health app environment is volatile, with a clinically relevant app for depression becoming unavailable to download every 2.9 days. This poses challenges for consumers and clinicians seeking relevant and long-term apps, as well as for researchers seeking to evaluate the evidence base for publicly available apps.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/3/e96/
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