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The objective of this study was to understand the attitudes of professionals who work in mental health regarding the use of conversational user interfaces, or chatbots, to support people’s mental health and wellbeing. This study involves an online survey to measure the awareness and attitudes of mental healthcare professionals and experts. The findings from this survey show that more than half of the participants in the survey agreed that there are benefits associated with mental healthcare chatbots (65%, p < 0.01). The perceived importance of chatbots was also relatively high (74%, p < 0.01), with more than three-quarters (79%, p < 0.01) of respondents agreeing that mental healthcare chatbots could help their clients better manage their own health, yet chatbots are overwhelmingly perceived as not adequately understanding or displaying human emotion (86%, p < 0.01). Even though the level of personal experience with chatbots among professionals and experts in mental health has been quite low, this study shows that where they have been used, the experience has been mostly satisfactory. This study has found that as years of experience increased, there was a corresponding increase in the belief that healthcare chatbots could help clients better manage their own mental health.
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Colm Sweeney
University of Ulster
Courtney Potts
New Jersey Institute of Technology
Edel Ennis
University of Ulster
ACM Transactions on Computing for Healthcare
University of Eastern Finland
University of Ulster
Luleå University of Technology
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Sweeney et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10e8ed2c0ee39daeee4f36 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3453175
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