Announcing: Mind Ease acquires UpLift, two EA mental health apps merge

By Peter Brietbart, Marta_Krzeminska @ 2021-10-27T11:39 (+68)

Summary

We’re excited to announce that Mind Ease, an EA-founded and led company focussed on providing anxiety relief via an app, is acquiring UpLift, a cognitive behavioural app for depression. Merging the products of the two companies, Mind Ease will aim to provide the best-in-class mental health app for both anxiety and depression. Our priority in the coming years is to merge these products, scale substantially, and use profits generated in high-income countries to ultimately give the app away for free in low-income countries. 

This update won’t spend time articulating why we think this is a potentially high expected value project, but for some discussion of the space please see this problem area report, this cause profile, this post about psychotherapy vs cash transfers, and this evaluation of Mind Ease.

What is Mind Ease?

Mind Ease: Anxiety Relief is an app that provides help for those suffering from symptoms of anxiety. The app includes interactive exercises based on techniques such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT), and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) as well as other evidence-based approaches, including mindfulness meditation. 

  The interventions are grouped into two types:

One of the strengths of Mind Ease is measurement. The app asks the user to record their feelings before and after every Calm Me intervention. This way it can measure the percent of increase of positive feelings, and decrease of negative feelings. Over time, this data helps establish which specific intervention works best for every user. 

The effectiveness of each exercise is verified by our own randomized trials, run through GuidedTrack and Positly, Spark Wave's study creation and participant recruitment platforms. We also use a data dashboard to keep track of each exercise’s performance, including the average reduction of self-reported negative feelings, per-screen drop-off rates, improvement in overall mood, and user-submitted feedback.

What is UpLift?

UpLift is an app focused on helping people who experience depression. It offers an 11-week program of structured, interactive sessions based on Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT). It aims to be the best in class digital intervention for depression. 

A pilot, longitudinal study run by the UpLift team[1] found a large decrease in PHQ-9 depression scores from the first session (M = 9.45, SD = 4.11) to the final final session (M = 4.51, SD = 3.67) for those who completed the program (n=81). The mean decrease in depression score was 52.3%. There was also a decrease in GAD-7 scores for completers from the first session (M = 8.68, SD = 4.97) to after the final session (M = 5.38, SD = 4.37) with a mean decrease in anxiety score of 38.0%. While these results were very encouraging, they are from a pilot study of an early version of UpLift, which has undergone substantial improvements since then. The study was longitudinal in nature, but did not have a control group. We hope to run a randomized controlled trial to gather further evidence related to effectiveness, which controls for potential confounders, as well as ruling out regression to the mean effects.

Why combine the companies?

Many people who suffer from anxiety also suffer from depression, and vice versa[2]. As a result, an app which can provide solutions for both conditions is able to provide an all-in-one solution, which is more complete for individual users and health care providers.

The Mind Ease and UpLift content is strongly complementary. Mind Ease specializes in a fast feedback cycle for users (helping them reduce anxiety quickly whenever they need it). UpLift, on the other hand, has an in-depth program aimed at providing long-term mental health benefits. This combination of short-term and long-term focussed content has advantages over either one individually.

Both products have come out of Spark Wave, a startup foundry created by Spencer Greenberg to incubate companies focused on important social problems. Both UpLift and Mind Ease are built largely using GuidedTrack, which simplifies the technical challenges of combining them.

Ultimately, we think combining will result in a stronger product, with better chances at having substantial impact at scale.

Summary of Mind Ease Progress 

Since we last posted about Mind Ease, which was in 2018, we have:

Future plans

How can you get involved

If you’re interested in Mind Ease or UpLift, we'd love your help! Here are four options for things you could potentially do if you're interested:

With thanks to Spencer Greenberg, Jacy Reese, and Michael Plant for their valuable input on this post.

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References:

[1] Liu, E., & Pluta, A., & Dobson, K. (2018, November). Pilot Study on UpLift A Computerized Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Mobile App for Depression. Poster session presented at the 52nd Annual Convention for the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT), Washington, D.C.

[2] Groen, R.N., Ryan, O., Wigman, J.T.W. et al. Comorbidity between depression and anxiety: assessing the role of bridge mental states in dynamic psychological networks. BMC Med 18, 308 (2020). [available here]

Other:

Twenge, J. M., “The Age of Anxiety? Birth Cohort Change in Anxiety and Neuroticism, 1952-1993”, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 2000, Vol. 79, No. 6, 1007-1021. [available here]

St. Sauver, et.al. “Why do patients visit their doctors? Assessing the most prevalent conditions in a defined US population”, Mayo Clin Proc. 2013 Jan; 88(1): 56–67. [available here]

McManus S, Bebbington P, Jenkins R, Brugha T. (eds.) (2016) Mental health and wellbeing in England: Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey 2014. Leeds: NHS Digital. [available here]

Mental Health Foundation, In the face of fear How fear and anxiety affect our health and society, and what we can do about it. 2009. [available here]



 


Dvir Caspi @ 2021-10-30T18:39 (+2)

Hats off to you guys, well done!