More Modality, More AI: Exploring Design Opportunities of AI-Based Multi-modal Remote Monitoring Technologies for Early Detection of Mental Health Sequelae in Youth Concussion Patients
Bingsheng Yao, Menglin Zhao, Yuling Sun, Weidan Cao, Changchang Yin,, Stephen Intille, Xuhai Xu, Ping Zhang, Jingzhen Yang, Dakuo Wang

TL;DR
This paper explores how AI-enhanced multi-modal remote monitoring can improve early detection of mental health issues in youth concussion patients, addressing clinician challenges in data collection and decision-making.
Contribution
It introduces a novel design framework integrating AI-based multi-modal RPM technologies tailored for youth concussion mental health monitoring.
Findings
Clinicians value multi-modal AI-RPM for decision support.
Customizable interfaces are crucial for clinician adoption.
Design evaluation shows positive clinician feedback.
Abstract
Anxiety, depression, and suicidality are common mental health sequelae following concussion in youth patients, often exacerbating concussion symptoms and prolonging recovery. Despite the critical need for early detection of these mental health symptoms, clinicians often face challenges in accurately collecting patients' mental health data and making clinical decision-making in a timely manner. Today's remote patient monitoring (RPM) technologies offer opportunities to objectively monitor patients' activities, but they were not specifically designed for youth concussion patients; moreover, the large amount of data collected by RPM technologies may also impose significant workloads on clinicians to keep up with and use the data. To address these gaps, we employed a three-stage study consisting of a formative study, interface design, and design evaluation. We first conducted a formative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare Systems and Public Health · Traumatic Brain Injury Research · Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare and Education
