TY - JOUR AU - Yu, Yu AU - Li, Yilu AU - Li, Tongxin AU - Xi, Shijun AU - Xiao, Xi AU - Xiao, Shuiyuan AU - Tebes, Jacob Kraemer PY - 2020 DA - 2020/9/18 TI - New Path to Recovery and Well-Being: Cross-Sectional Study on WeChat Use and Endorsement of WeChat-Based mHealth Among People Living With Schizophrenia in China JO - J Med Internet Res SP - e18663 VL - 22 IS - 9 KW - WeChat KW - mHealth KW - schizophrenia KW - China KW - symptoms KW - functioning KW - recovery KW - quality of life KW - well-being AB - Background: The past few decades have seen an exponential increase in using mobile phones to support medical care (mobile health [mHealth]) among people living with psychosis worldwide, yet little is known about WeChat use and WeChat-based mHealth among people living with schizophrenia (PLS) in China. Objective: This study aims to assess WeChat use, endorsement of WeChat-based mHealth programs, and health related to WeChat use among PLS. Methods: We recruited a random sample of 400 PLS from 12 communities in Changsha City of Hunan Province, China. WeChat use was assessed using the adapted WeChat Use Intensity Questionnaire (WUIQ). We also compared psychiatric symptoms, functioning, disability, recovery, quality of life, and general well-being between WeChat users and nonusers using one-to-one propensity-score matching. Results: The WeChat use rate was 40.8% in this sample (163/400); 30.7% (50/163) had more than 50 WeChat friends and nearly half (81/163, 49.7%) spent more than half an hour on WeChat, a pattern similar to college students and the elderly. PLS also showed higher emotional connectedness to WeChat use than college students. About 80.4% (131/163) of PLS were willing to participate in a WeChat-based mHealth program, including psychoeducation (91/163, 55.8%), professional support (82/163, 50.3%), and peer support (67/163, 41.1%). Compared with nonusers, WeChat users were younger, better educated, and more likely to be employed. WeChat use was associated with improved health outcomes, including lower psychiatric symptoms, lower depression, higher functioning, better recovery, and higher quality of life. Conclusions: WeChat-based mHealth programs hold promise as an empowering tool to provide cost-effective interventions, to foster global recovery, and to improve both physical and mental well-being among PLS. WeChat and WeChat-based mHealth programs have the potential to offer a new path to recovery and well-being for PLS in China. SN - 1438-8871 UR - http://www.jmir.org/2020/9/e18663/ UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/18663 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32945774 DO - 10.2196/18663 ID - info:doi/10.2196/18663 ER -