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N/A N=76 Randomized Treatment

Clinical Investigation of Wysa

Mental Health Issue · Anxiety · Depressive Symptoms

Enrolled (actual)
76
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Feb 2025
Primary outcome: Primary: Depression Severity — 9.28; 8.41 units on a scale

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
N/A
Interventions
Wysa AI chatbot mental health app (Device)
Age
Adult, Older Adult · 18+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
University of Plymouth
Primary completion
Jul 2023

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Depression Severity
9.28; 8.41
SECONDARY
Anxiety Severity
8.98; 8.19
SECONDARY
Crisis Identification
4; 1; 0; 0
SECONDARY
Uptake Rates
30; 16
SECONDARY
Dropout Rates
23; 7
SECONDARY
Use of the App
18; 12
SECONDARY
Engagement
4; 4; 4; 2
SECONDARY
Patient Perceptions of Acceptability
4; 4; 4; 4; 3; 3
SECONDARY
General Health State
0.681; 0.607; 0.688; 0.644
SECONDARY
Type of App Usage - Exercises Completed
7.11
SECONDARY
Type of App Usage - Sessions Completed
24.3
SECONDARY
Type of App Usage - Messages to Chatbot
227

Summary

Mental health concerns are a large burden for individuals, healthcare systems, and the economy. Over a million people are referred to UK mental health services each year, but more than half only receive one session of workbook-based support. Many others have to wait over 12 weeks for assessment and treatment. Wysa is a digital health app with over 3 million users that uses an artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot and a series of self-care exercises to provide mental health support and to help people develop strategies to manage their mental health and improve their resilience. This project aims to examine the impact of using Wysa on patients' symptoms of anxiety and depression during the referral process for standard UK mental health services. Patients will be given access to Wysa at the point of referral to the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme and can begin to explore the self-support tools, while they are on the waitlist for assessment and treatment. The investigators will gather a group of patients and members of the public to contribute to the recruitment of patients for the study, the methods we use to evaluate Wysa, and to provide insights on how best to share the results of our study with the general public. The investigators will use the standard IAPT measures of anxiety and depression to look at the effect of using Wysa patients' mental well-being. These questionnaires will be provided through the app and the results will be compared with a waitlist control group. The investigators will examine whether Wysa can identify people who are experiencing severe mental health difficulties so that they can be provided with additional support. Users' levels of engagement with Wysa will be assessed and some participants will be randomly selected to do an interview so the investigators can get a better understanding of what people liked and disliked about using the app and why. Finally, the investigators will be evaluating the cost-effectiveness of Wysa compared with usual care. The investigators expect that the study will show that Wysa helps reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression in people who are on the waiting list for IAPT. If the study shows this positive impact, this will provide evidence to support the use of Wysa to improve the accessibility of mental health support in clinical pathways. The investigators will be publishing the results of our study in academic journals as well as in more generally accessible platforms.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Willing and able to provide informed consent;
  • Aged 18 years or older;
  • Ability to speak English to a secondary school standard;
  • Own a mobile device capable of supporting Wysa;
  • A valid email address;
  • Referred or self-referred to proceed through the standard IAPT care pathway.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients ineligible for the standard IAPT care pathway;
  • Patients with previous and current known major mental illness such as Schizophrenia, severe depression, any co-morbid neurological or neuro-psychiatric condition such as epilepsy;
  • Patients with current psychosis or a history of psychotic symptoms within the last 6 months;
  • Patients with suicidal ideation;
  • Patients scoring > 15 points on PHQ 9;
  • Patients scoring > 15 points on GAD-7;
  • Patients with significant cognitive disorders;
  • Patients with noted neurodevelopmental conditions such as autism or ADHD;
  • Patients previously diagnosed with a personality disorder;
  • Patients who been under the care of CMHT or a specialised mental health services in the last 2 years;
  • Patients who failed IAPT previously;
  • Patients with referrals for specialist presentations of pre-existing, diagnosed conditions requiring a specialised assessment beyond the standard clinical pathway;
  • Incapable of self-consent;
  • In a dependent/unequal relationship with the research or care teams or any PPI representatives.
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05533190). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.

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