CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 452 enrolled
Drug / intervention
JOURNeY anonymous +1 moreother
Likely dose
Not stated in record
Structured eligibility isn't available for this trial yet — see the full criteria in the Eligibility tab below.

Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT06465589
NCT06465589N/ACompleted

PRIVATE - Preference Research: Investigating Variations of Anonymity, Transparency, and Efficacy in Digital Health Applications

University of Bern·interventional·Posted Jun 20, 2024·Updated Apr 20, 2026

In Brief

A clinical study evaluating JOURNeY anonymous and JOURNeY standard for Social Anxiety. Completed, enrolled 452 participants across 1 site.

Detailed Summary

Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) is one of the most widespread mental illnesses and it has previously been shown that online therapy and online self-help tools such as the one investigated in this study can be successful in reducing not only symptoms of SAD but also symptoms of depression and increase the quality of life of participants. A substantial concern with digital health intervention tools is data security and privacy as many such tools have been found to be unsafe and easy targets for hacker attacks, potentially endangering personal (health) data of the users. For this research project, an internet-based program targeting social anxiety has been developed that can be used completely anonymously (i.e., without collecting an email address or other information that can or could potentially identify users). This new anonymized version will be compared in a partially randomized patient preference trial with an already well-evaluated version in which, as is common in other digital health applications, personal data such as the email address or other information from the users is used, for example, for login. Study objectives: 1. To investigate the efficacy of a completely anonymous version of the program "JOURNeY" based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and compare it to an already evidence-based non-anonymous version of the program regarding primary social anxiety symptoms, and secondary outcomes such as depressive symptoms, quality of life, usability, adherence to the program, internalized stigma, attitudes on help-seeking, and personality functioning. 2. To investigate patients' preferences and the influence of patients' preferences on outcome. 3. To explore how patient characteristics are associated with participants' preferences.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
ConditionsSocial Anxiety
CountriesSwitzerland
Collaborators--

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
20252026
First PostedJun 20, 2024
Enrollment StartSep 3, 2024
Primary CompletionMar 2, 2026
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 1.5 yearsPosted 2.0 years ago

Interventions

JOURNeY anonymousother

The anonymously usable version of the self-help program JOURNeY which does not require a login and does not collect personal data. Includes 4 main components: 1. psychoeducation where participants learn about SAD and the treatment, 2. cognitive restructuring where participants challenge dysfunctional social cognitions, 3. attention training where participants learn to decrease self-focused attention, and 4. exposure where participants seek out and endure fear-inducing situations. Additionally, there is a first module which discusses motivation and a conclusion module which encourages participants to keep practicing and using techniques they learned in the program in their daily life.

JOURNeY standardother

The standard version of the self-help program JOURNeY which requires a login and collects personal data. Includes 4 main components: 1. psychoeducation where participants learn about SAD and the treatment, 2. cognitive restructuring where participants challenge dysfunctional social cognitions, 3. attention training where participants learn to decrease self-focused attention, and 4. exposure where participants seek out and endure fear-inducing situations. Additionally, there is a first module which discusses motivation and a conclusion module which encourages participants to keep practicing and using techniques they learned in the program in their daily life.