logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Cognitive behavioral therapy skills via a smartphone app for subthreshold depression among adults in the community: the RESILIENT randomized controlled trial

Medicine and Health

Cognitive behavioral therapy skills via a smartphone app for subthreshold depression among adults in the community: the RESILIENT randomized controlled trial

T. A. Furukawa, A. Tajika, et al.

This large randomized trial tested a smartphone app delivering five CBT skills (behavioral activation, cognitive restructuring, problem‑solving, assertion training, and insomnia therapy) in 3,936 adults with subthreshold depression, finding all skills and combinations outperformed control conditions with substantial symptom improvement and high adherence. Research conducted by the authors listed in the <Authors> tag.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Subthreshold depression, characterized by depressive symptoms that do not fully meet diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder, affects about 11% of the global population and is linked to impaired social function, reduced quality of life, increased healthcare utilization, and higher mortality. Individuals with subthreshold depression are three times more likely to develop a major depressive episode than those without. This trial investigated whether specific components of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) promote mental health by developing a smartphone app with five representative CBT skills: behavioral activation (BA), cognitive restructuring (CR), problem-solving (PS), assertion training (AT), and behavior therapy for insomnia (BI). Using a master randomized design with four 2×2 factorial trials, the study recruited 3,936 adults with subthreshold depression (September 2022–February 2024). Follow-up at week 6 was 97%; adherence to the app was 84%. All CBT skills and their combinations significantly outperformed three control conditions (delayed treatment, health information, self-check). Effect sizes (standardized mean differences, SMD) for PHQ-9 change from baseline to week 6 ranged between -0.67 (95% CI: -0.81 to -0.53) and -0.16 (-0.30 to -0.02). These findings identify active CBT ingredients to inform design of scalable, effective psychotherapies.
Publisher
Nature Medicine
Published On
Jun 01, 2025
Authors
Toshi A. Furukawa, Aran Tajika, Rie Toyomoto, Masatsugu Sakata, Yan Luo, Masaru Horikoshi, Tatsuo Akechi, Norito Kawakami, Takeo Nakayama, Naoki Kondo, Shingo Fukuma, Ronald C. Kessler, Helen Christensen, Alexis Whitton, Inbal Nahum-Shani, Wolfgang Lutz, Pim Cuijpers, James M. S. Wason, Hisashi Noma
Tags
subthreshold depression
cognitive behavioral therapy
smartphone app
behavioral activation
cognitive restructuring
randomized trial
scalable psychotherapy
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny