Many young people in the Middle East face anxiety problems, and social stigma often stops them from getting help. Doctors' usual talks sometimes miss the right diagnosis, and most treatments only target one part of anxiety (thoughts, feelings, or body reactions). This study tested a free mobile app designed to help teens aged 13-19 manage anxiety better on their own or with support. The app uses artificial intelligence (AI) to chat with users, ask questions based on standard medical guidelines, and suggest a personalized plan. It combines four proven therapy styles: * Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) - helps change unhelpful thoughts and behaviors * Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) - teaches accepting feelings while focusing on what matters * Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) - combines mindfulness with ways to handle negative thoughts * Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) - uses mindfulness exercises to reduce stress Users can also write in a private journal, review their past entries to track patterns, join video group sessions with other teens (after a short readiness check to ensure a good fit), and try virtual reality exercises to face fears safely. The app works in many languages, including Egyptian Arabic dialects, keeps chats private and encrypted, and only shares info with a psychiatrist for diagnosis help if needed. It also uses AI to read facial expressions and voice tone for real-time feedback on emotions. We enrolled 587 teens (some used the app, others did not as a comparison group) and measured how well the app diagnosed anxiety and reduced symptoms.
Anxiety disorders show rising prevalence in the Middle East (estimated at 6.33% in recent data), compounded by cultural stigma that limits help-seeking. Conventional diagnostic interviews are prone to misclassification, and unimodal therapies often fail to address the full cognitive, emotional, and physiological dimensions of anxiety. This randomized controlled trial evaluated a mobile application delivering an integrated, AI-assisted intervention for adolescents aged 13-19 years with anxiety symptoms or disorders. The app employs an unstructured diagnostic model powered by the Gemini API, synthesizing DSM-5 and SCID-RV criteria via natural language processing to inform personalized treatment pathways. The core intervention integrates four evidence-based psychotherapeutic modalities within a single platform: * Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) techniques for cognitive restructuring and behavioral experiments * Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) modules emphasizing values clarification, defusion, and committed action * Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) for relapse prevention and metacognitive awareness * Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) practices for stress physiology regulation Additional components include: * Secure, encrypted journaling for thought/emotion tracking * Historical data review to contextualize symptom patterns * Video-based synchronous group therapy sessions, with group assignment guided by the adapted Adolescent Group Therapy Readiness Questionnaire (AGTRQ; derived from GTQ/GRQ) to optimize therapeutic fit and cohesion * Real-time AI-driven analysis of facial expressions and vocal prosody for emotional state feedback * Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy (VRET) modules for graduated exposure to anxiety triggers * Full multilingual support, including colloquial Egyptian Arabic * Privacy safeguards restrict psychiatrist access to diagnostic outputs only. The trial used a parallel-group design with an experimental arm (app access; n=217) versus control (n=370; likely treatment-as-usual or waitlist based on standard practices).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
587
A mobile application delivering an integrated behavioral intervention for anxiety disorders in adolescents aged 13-19. It uses an AI chatbot for diagnostic support (DSM-5/SCID-RV criteria) and personalized delivery of four evidence-based therapies: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), and Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR). Additional features include secure journaling, session history review, AI real-time emotional feedback via facial expression and voice-tone analysis, video-based group therapy with readiness screening (AGTRQ), Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy (VRET) modules, multilingual support (including Egyptian Arabic dialects), and encrypted data privacy with limited psychiatrist access for diagnostic purposes only.
STEM Egypty
Cairo, Egypt
Change in Anxiety Symptoms (SCAS Total Score)
The primary outcome is the change in anxiety symptom severity, measured by the total score on the Spence Children's Anxiety Scale (SCAS; child self-report version, 44 items, 0-3 Likert scale per item, total range 0-114, higher scores indicate greater anxiety severity). The SCAS assesses symptoms aligned with DSM anxiety disorders (e.g., separation anxiety, social phobia, generalized anxiety, panic, obsessive-compulsive, physical injury fears). A clinically significant reduction is defined as exceeding the 4-6 point Minimal Clinically Important Difference (MCID) threshold established for pediatric anxiety measures. This outcome evaluates the efficacy of the mobile app intervention in reducing anxiety symptoms compared to the control group.
Time frame: Baseline to post-intervention (8 weeks)
Diagnostic Performance of the AI Chatbot (Sensitivity)
Sensitivity (true positive rate) of the app's AI chatbot diagnostic model (based on DSM-5 and SCID-RV criteria via Gemini API) in correctly identifying anxiety disorders compared to structured clinical assessment or expert confirmation. Reported as percentage. This evaluates the accuracy of the unstructured AI diagnostic approach in adolescents.
Time frame: After 8 weeks of Chatbot use
Diagnostic Performance of the AI Chatbot (Specificity)
Specificity (true negative rate) of the app's AI chatbot in correctly ruling out anxiety disorders. Reported as percentage.
Time frame: After 8 weeks of Chatbot use
Diagnostic Performance Metrics (PPV, NPV, Accuracy, MCC, F1 Score)
Additional diagnostic validity indicators including Positive Predictive Value (PPV), Negative Predictive Value (NPV), overall accuracy, Matthews Correlation Coefficient (MCC), and F1 score of the AI diagnostic model. These provide a comprehensive evaluation of the chatbot's reliability for anxiety disorder classification in adolescents. Reported as percentages or coefficients.
Time frame: After 8 weeks
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