Published on in Vol 23, No 12 (2021): December

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/26584, first published .
Quality Social Connection as an Active Ingredient in Digital Interventions for Young People With Depression and Anxiety: Systematic Scoping Review and Meta-analysis

Quality Social Connection as an Active Ingredient in Digital Interventions for Young People With Depression and Anxiety: Systematic Scoping Review and Meta-analysis

Quality Social Connection as an Active Ingredient in Digital Interventions for Young People With Depression and Anxiety: Systematic Scoping Review and Meta-analysis

Journals

  1. Geulayov G, Mansfield K, Jindra C, Hawton K, Fazel M. Loneliness and self-harm in adolescents during the first national COVID-19 lockdown: results from a survey of 10,000 secondary school pupils in England. Current Psychology 2024;43(15):14063 View
  2. Dewa L, Roberts L, Lawrance E, Ashrafian H. Authors’ Reply to: Toward a Better Understanding of Quality Social Connections. Comment on “Quality Social Connection as an Active Ingredient in Digital Interventions for Young People With Depression and Anxiety: Systematic Scoping Review and Meta-analysis”. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2022;24(3):e37440 View
  3. Deng H, Qin X. Toward a Better Understanding of Quality Social Connections. Comment on “Quality Social Connection as an Active Ingredient in Digital Interventions for Young People With Depression and Anxiety: Systematic Scoping Review and Meta-analysis”. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2022;24(3):e36739 View
  4. Rickard N, Kurt P, Meade T. Systematic assessment of the quality and integrity of popular mental health smartphone apps using the American Psychiatric Association's app evaluation model. Frontiers in Digital Health 2022;4 View
  5. Ahmed M, Cerda I, Maloof M. Breaking the vicious cycle: The interplay between loneliness, metabolic illness, and mental health. Frontiers in Psychiatry 2023;14 View
  6. Lu J, Li Y, Cao L, Zhou Z. Can digital finance mitigate trust issues for chronically ill patients because of relative deprivation of income?. DIGITAL HEALTH 2023;9 View
  7. Papageorgiou V, Dewa L, Bruton J, Murray K, Hewlett N, Thamm W, Hamza H, Frumiento P, Steward R, Bradshaw M, Brooks-Hall E, Petretti S, Ewans S, Williams M, Chapko D. ‘Building bridges’: reflections and recommendations for co-producing health research. Research Involvement and Engagement 2023;9(1) View
  8. Dewa L, Roberts L, Choong E, Crandell C, Demkowicz O, Ashworth E, Branquinho C, Scott S, Zimmerman S. The impact of COVID-19 on young people’s mental health, wellbeing and routine from a European perspective: A co-produced qualitative systematic review. PLOS ONE 2024;19(3):e0299547 View
  9. Chen J, Li C, An K, Dong X, Liu J, Wu H. Effectiveness of telemedicine on common mental disorders: An umbrella review and meta-meta-analysis. Computers in Human Behavior 2024;159:108325 View
  10. Zhou Y, Xi C. Commentary: Mastery is central: an examination of complex interrelationships between physical health, stress and adaptive cognition, and social connection with depression and anxiety symptoms. Frontiers in Psychiatry 2024;15 View

Books/Policy Documents

  1. Kloß C. Einsam in Gesellschaft. View
  2. Gega L, Saiger M. Brief CBT and Science-Based Tailoring for Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults. View