Section A. Introduction and Evidence Base
1. Need for a Paradigm Shift: Gaps and Failures in Traditional
Mental Health and Addiction Treatments
2. Digital Therapeutics: A New Class of Tools for Old Problems
3. State of the Science of Internet-Based Programs for
Direct-to-Consumer Standalone Care for Mental Health and
Addiction
4. State of the Science of Mental Health and Addiction Treatment
Apps for Direct-to-Consumer Standalone Care (Second Wave of
Scalable Digital Therapeutics)
5. Blending Digital Therapeutics with Traditional Treatments within
the Healthcare System
Section B. The New Frontier
6. Using Advances in Technology to Identify Digital Biomarkers to
Improve Passive Patient Monitoring
7. Receptivity of Mobile Health Interventions
8. Analytics for Adapting Interventions to Context Targeting
Vulnerability and Receptivity
9. Digital Therapeutic Alliance
10. The First Wave of Conversational Agents: Chatbots Embedded
within Smartphones and the Internet
11. The Second Wave of Conversational Agents: Voice Assistants
within Everyday Objects and the Internet of Things
Section C. Import Considerations
12. Cultural Adaptations of Digital Therapeutics
13. Implementation, Business Models, and Regulation
14. Lessons Learned and Potential Pitfalls
15. Privacy and Security
16. Ethical Considerations of Digital Therapeutics
17. Design Considerations for Preparation, Optimization, Evaluation
and Maintaining Digital Therapeutics
18. Futuristic Vision 10-20 Years Out
Nick Jacobson is a tenure-track assistant professor in the
departments of Biomedical Data Science and Psychiatry within the
Center for Technology and Behavioral Health in the Geisel School of
Medicine at Dartmouth College. He directs the AI and Mental Health:
Innovation in Technology Guided Healthcare (AIM HIGH)
Laboratory.
Dr. Jacobson researches the use of technology to enhance both the
assessment and treatment of anxiety and depression. His work has
focused on (1) enhancing precision assessment of anxiety and
depression using intensive longitudinal data, (2) conducting
multimethod assessment utilizing passive sensor data from
smartphones and wearable devices, and (3) providing scalable,
personalized technology-based treatments utilizing smartphones. He
has a strong interest in creating personalized just-in-time
adaptive interventions and the quantitative tools that make this
work possible. To date, Dr. Jacobson’s smartphone applications
which assess and treat anxiety and depression have been downloaded
and installed by more than 50,000 people in over 100 countries. Dr.
Tobias Kowatsch is Assistant Professor for Digital Health at the
University of St. Gallen and the Scientific Director of the Center
for Digital Health Interventions, a joint initiative of the
Department of Management, Technology and Economics at ETH Zurich
and the Institute of Technology Management at the University of St.
Gallen. In close collaboration with his interdisciplinary team and
research partners, Tobias designs digital health interventions
("digital pills") at the intersection of information systems
reserach, comuter science and behavioral medicine. He helped
initiate and participates in the on-going development of
MobileCoach, an open source platform for ecological momentary
assessments, health monitoring and digital health interventions. He
is also co-founder of the ETH Zurich and University of St. Gallen
spin-off company Pathmate Technologies that creates and delivers
digital clinical pathways. Dr. Lisa A. Marsch is the Director of
the Dartmouth Center for Technology and Behavioral Health, a
designated “Center of Excellence supported by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of Health.
She is also the Director of the Northeast Node of the National Drug
Abuse Clinical Trials Network based out of Dartmouth and the Andrew
G. Wallace Professor within the Department of Psychiatry at the
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College. And, she leads a
national “Science of Behavior Change initiative supported by the
National Institutes of Health with partners at Dartmouth, Stanford,
Arizona State University, Drexel, and MIT.
In addition to directing this national Center, Dr. Marsch has
personally been Principal Investigator on 35 grants, largely from
the National Institutes of Health. She has led the development,
evaluation and implementation of technology-based therapeutic tools
for addiction treatment, HIV prevention, mental health, chronic
pain management, substance abuse prevention, smoking cessation, and
binge eating disorder. Her work in technology and addiction
treatment has been particularly pioneering, as she is widely
recognized as having led the development of one of the most widely
tested and evidence-based mobile intervention for addiction
treatment.
Dr. Marsch publishes extensively and is a regular keynote speaker
at national and international scientific meetings (including
invited presentations at the White House, Congressional briefings,
the World Bank, and for the US Surgeon General). She has served as
a consultant to the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse
at the World Health Organization. She serves on the National
Advisory Council to the National Institute on Drug Abuse at the
National Institutes of Health. And, she serves on the Health
Information Technology Policy Committee on Advanced Health Models
and Meaningful Use for the U.S. Office of the National
Coordinator.
She also led the development of a seminal book from Oxford
University Press on the state of the science of leveraging
technologies in transforming behavioral health care.
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