May 22, 2014 – A DOD-funded smartphone app whose tools have been used in their physical form for a decade to treat patients with anxiety, stress, negative thinking and more is now available free to the public, and it’s being studied for use in those with more serious psychological health problems, experts involved in the app’s funding and use said.The mobile application was developed at the National Center for Telehealth and Technology, known as T2, research psychologist Dr. Nigel Bush told American Forces Press Service, and it’s a digital version of a well-known physical psychological health tool -- an accessory to clinical care, he said -- called a hope box.
“These days in behavioral health clinics, when common symptoms are things like negative thinking and high stress, one approach is to have the patient collect things in a box that are important and that may be therapeutic to them,” Bush said.
It can be a shoebox, a manila envelope or a backpack, he added, “but it's a repository for things that the clinician and the patient together determine are beneficial, soothing, evocative of good times, and make the patient feel more worthwhile.”
T2, located at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state, is DOD’s main office for cutting-edge approaches to applying technology to psychological health. read more>>>
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