Background Mental health conditions commonly co-occur with chronic diseases, yet few evidence-based interventions are designed for rural populations or scalable within primary care. This study evaluated the mental health impact, clinical significance, and usability of a digitally delivered Personal Empowerment Program (PEP). Methods This single-arm prospective interventional trial (October 2023−August 2025) enrolled 182 community-dwelling adults with ≥1 physician-diagnosed chronic condition in Pictou County, Nova Scotia. The six-month PEP program delivered daily digital modules via email and YouTube covering physical fitness, nutrition, mindfulness, sleep, and social connection, with weekly self-monitoring and monthly videoconferencing, optimized for low-bandwidth mobile access. The primary outcome was psychological distress (Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K10); secondary outcomes included anxiety (GAD-7) and depression (CES-D). Generalized estimated equations assessed changes (baseline, 6, and 12 months). Results A total of 115 participants (63.2%) completed 6- and 12-month K10 follow-up assessments. K10 scores declined by 3.00 points (95% CI:−4.05,−1.95) at 6 months and 3.60 (95% CI:−4.84,−2.36) at 12 months (both P < 0.001). GAD-7 scores declined by 1.36 points (95% CI:−2.28,−0.45) at 6 months and 2.11 points (95% CI:−3.03,−1.20) at 12 months, while CES-D scores declined by 2.43 points (95% CI:−4.65,−0.21) at 6 months and 4.31 points (95% CI:−6.84,−1.78) at 12 months. Clinically meaningful improvement at 12 months was observed in 23% (K10), 23% (GAD-7), and 38% (CES-D) of participants. Usability ratings were high. Conclusions PEP demonstrates sustained mental health benefits and high usability within a scalable, low-bandwidth digital model, supporting equitable mental health care for rural adults with chronic conditions.
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