MasterMind Launch Media Release

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A groundbreaking digital service that teaches people to cope with mental health conditions has been launched today by the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing, Alex Neil, MSP at the Scottish

Digital Health & Care Conference in Edinburgh.

The £800k project is part of the wider European Mastermind programme and includes a two-year computerised Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (cCBT) trial across four health board regions - Shetland,

Grampian, Lanarkshire and Fife.

The trial will allow GPs and other mental health professionals to offer the digital therapy to patients with mild to moderate depression or anxiety within the four participating health boards. Face to face

CBT has been used for many years to treat depression and this digital therapy will enable a much larger patient group to access the clinically-proven digital treatment.

The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing, Alex Neil MSP, said: "Programmes such as

Mastermind provide opportunities for increased levels of patient care. Not only will the service provide improved access to psychological therapies for patients, it will increase the range of choice on the mode of therapy open to them and offers flexibility for patients in accessing psychological therapies."

In Scotland, early trials of cCBT by NHS Forth Valley and Tayside have led to it's adoption by their psychological therapy departments due to consistently effective results. To date, more than 7,000 patients have benefitted from this digital therapy.

NHS 24 will project manage Mastermind in Scotland to ensure the delivery of the two year trial and to support the development of cCBT across the whole of Scotland. The project's overall European aims are to examine the factors and best practice required in different cultural and healthcare structures, to replicate this type of intervention more widely in the EU.

Dr Stella Clark, Medical Director, Primary Care, NHS Fife and Clinical Lead for Mental Health, NHS 24, said :

"We will support our partner Health Boards who will deliver this digital therapy as part of their own psycological therapy services. Computerised CBT is useful for all adults with mild to moderate depression and anxiety who require a flexible treatment, that they can do from a range of different locations and at a time that suits them. It is also suitable for patients who don't like the idea of talking therapies or would prefer the anonymity a computerised treatment offers.

"For clinicians, it means that more patients have access to an early intervention for mild to moderate depression."

The conference is part of the week-long Scottish Digital Health & Care Week organised to promote the benefits digital health and care projects are making across the country.

Notes:

The MasterMind programme will build on the experiences gained, and the local services now available, from Forth Valley and Tayside.

Mastermind - Management of Mental Health Disorders Through Advanced Technology and Services- is a three year programme which explores the barriers and facilitators to roll-out computerised

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (cCBT). It looks at sharing of learning and identification of the factors and best practice required in different cultural and healthcare structures, to replicate this type of intervention more widely in the EU.

Mastermind aims to implement at scale evidence-based computerised Cognitive Behavioural

Therapy (cCBT) services for depressed adults across a number of EU and associated countries, and from this implementation:

Identify the barriers and success factors to implement cCBT on a large scale in different political, social, economic and technical health care contexts and from the perspective of different stakeholders such as patients and health care professionals.

Recommend successful strategies for implementing cCBT in these different contexts and settings.

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