Introduction Sand-based therapies, forms of play therapy, have been used to address emotional, behavioral, and psychosocial difficulties in children. Verbalizations, nonverbal cues, and depictions in the sand are used by therapists to assess client progress. In contrast, digital sand therapy uses digital apps or platforms to facilitate similar therapeutic processes. This narrative review examines the current state of evidence for sand-based therapies in pediatric populations with particular attention to the presence or absence of empirical research on digital sand therapy and their outcome measures. Methods Inclusion criteria consisted of quantitative or mixed-methods sand-based therapy studies published between 2005 and 2025, involving pediatric populations and published in peer-reviewed journals. Searches were performed using PubMed, Google Scholar, PsycINFO, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase, Perplexity AI, and the University of British Columbia library. Results A total of 130 articles were identified. After screening, eight articles satisfied the inclusion criteria; there were no studies included that used virtual or digital sand-based therapy. All traditional sand-based therapy studies reported significant improvements in experimental groups. However, methodological limitations were common, including small sample sizes, a lack of between group comparisons, and an overall lack of objective outcome measures. Discussion While traditional sand-based therapy studies suggest its potential effectiveness, marked limitations constrain the interpretations of these findings. Despite the promise and strengths of digital alternatives to traditional sand therapy, no empirical studies to date have examined their use in pediatric populations. While digital sandplay and sandtray platforms and applications exist, their clinical effectiveness has not yet been empirically studied. Conclusion This review highlights a need for digital sand-based therapy in pediatric populations as well as standardized, objective measures for session analysis. Future research should explore how digital platforms can be used to enable objective sandtray analysis in pediatric populations.
Jankelowitz et al. (Tue,) studied this question.