September 06, 2012

App Thursday: Coming to Your Smartphone: Therapy Apps




Apps can help you lose weight, count calories and keep track of your fitness goals. But now some researchers may have found a way to develop apps that can offer psychological help.

As Benedict Carey writes in Science Times, a new generation of apps may soon offer psychotherapy on the go.

In the past few years, researchers have been testing simple, video-game-like programs aimed at relieving common problems like anxiety and depression. These recent results have been encouraging enough that investigators are now delivering the programs on smartphones — therapy apps, in effect, that may soon make psychological help accessible anytime, anywhere, whether in the grocery store line, on the bus, or just before a work presentation.

The prospect of a therapy icon next to Angry Birds and Fruit Ninja is stirring as much dread as hope in some quarters. “We are built as human beings to figure out our place in the world, to construct a narrative in the context of a relationship that gives meaning to our lives,” said Dr. Andrew Gerber, a psychiatrist at Columbia University. “I would be wary of treatments that don’t allow for that.”

The upside is that well-designed apps could reach millions of people who lack the means or the interest to engage in traditional therapy and need more than the pop mysticism, soothing thoughts or confidence boosters currently in use.

(Source: well.blogs.nytimes.com)

No comments: