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Using Wearable Digital Devices to Screen Children for Mental Health Conditions: Ethical Promises and Challenges
by
Copeland, William E.
, Lovato, Juniper
, O’Leary, Aisling
, Douglas, Antranig
, Skelton, Joseph
, McGinnis, Ryan S.
, Loftness, Bryn
, McGinnis, Ellen W.
, Cohen, Jenna G.
, Lahey, Timothy
in
Accuracy
/ Anxiety
/ Artificial intelligence
/ Behavior
/ Biomarkers
/ Caregivers
/ Child
/ Child & adolescent mental health
/ Child psychopathology
/ Children
/ Digital health
/ Ethics
/ Families & family life
/ Health surveys
/ Heart rate
/ Humans
/ Mass Screening - ethics
/ Mass Screening - instrumentation
/ Medical screening
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Mental Disorders - diagnosis
/ Mental Health
/ Pediatrics
/ Physiology
/ Privacy
/ Sensors
/ Smartphones
/ Task forces
/ Wearable Electronic Devices - ethics
/ wearables
2024
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Using Wearable Digital Devices to Screen Children for Mental Health Conditions: Ethical Promises and Challenges
by
Copeland, William E.
, Lovato, Juniper
, O’Leary, Aisling
, Douglas, Antranig
, Skelton, Joseph
, McGinnis, Ryan S.
, Loftness, Bryn
, McGinnis, Ellen W.
, Cohen, Jenna G.
, Lahey, Timothy
in
Accuracy
/ Anxiety
/ Artificial intelligence
/ Behavior
/ Biomarkers
/ Caregivers
/ Child
/ Child & adolescent mental health
/ Child psychopathology
/ Children
/ Digital health
/ Ethics
/ Families & family life
/ Health surveys
/ Heart rate
/ Humans
/ Mass Screening - ethics
/ Mass Screening - instrumentation
/ Medical screening
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Mental Disorders - diagnosis
/ Mental Health
/ Pediatrics
/ Physiology
/ Privacy
/ Sensors
/ Smartphones
/ Task forces
/ Wearable Electronic Devices - ethics
/ wearables
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Using Wearable Digital Devices to Screen Children for Mental Health Conditions: Ethical Promises and Challenges
by
Copeland, William E.
, Lovato, Juniper
, O’Leary, Aisling
, Douglas, Antranig
, Skelton, Joseph
, McGinnis, Ryan S.
, Loftness, Bryn
, McGinnis, Ellen W.
, Cohen, Jenna G.
, Lahey, Timothy
in
Accuracy
/ Anxiety
/ Artificial intelligence
/ Behavior
/ Biomarkers
/ Caregivers
/ Child
/ Child & adolescent mental health
/ Child psychopathology
/ Children
/ Digital health
/ Ethics
/ Families & family life
/ Health surveys
/ Heart rate
/ Humans
/ Mass Screening - ethics
/ Mass Screening - instrumentation
/ Medical screening
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Mental Disorders - diagnosis
/ Mental Health
/ Pediatrics
/ Physiology
/ Privacy
/ Sensors
/ Smartphones
/ Task forces
/ Wearable Electronic Devices - ethics
/ wearables
2024
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Using Wearable Digital Devices to Screen Children for Mental Health Conditions: Ethical Promises and Challenges
Journal Article
Using Wearable Digital Devices to Screen Children for Mental Health Conditions: Ethical Promises and Challenges
2024
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Overview
In response to a burgeoning pediatric mental health epidemic, recent guidelines have instructed pediatricians to regularly screen their patients for mental health disorders with consistency and standardization. Yet, gold-standard screening surveys to evaluate mental health problems in children typically rely solely on reports given by caregivers, who tend to unintentionally under-report, and in some cases over-report, child symptomology. Digital phenotype screening tools (DPSTs), currently being developed in research settings, may help overcome reporting bias by providing objective measures of physiology and behavior to supplement child mental health screening. Prior to their implementation in pediatric practice, however, the ethical dimensions of DPSTs should be explored. Herein, we consider some promises and challenges of DPSTs under three broad categories: accuracy and bias, privacy, and accessibility and implementation. We find that DPSTs have demonstrated accuracy, may eliminate concerns regarding under- and over-reporting, and may be more accessible than gold-standard surveys. However, we also find that if DPSTs are not responsibly developed and deployed, they may be biased, raise privacy concerns, and be cost-prohibitive. To counteract these potential shortcomings, we identify ways to support the responsible and ethical development of DPSTs for clinical practice to improve mental health screening in children.
Publisher
MDPI AG
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