A narrative review to identify promising approaches for digital health interventions to support emotion regulation for adolescents with ADHD

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Abstract

Background: Emotion regulation difficulties affect many adolescents with ADHD, and previous research has highlighted a need for accessible interventions to support them in this domain, especially in real life contexts. Digital health interventions (DHIs) can be embedded in adolescents’ daily lives and thus offer considerable promise for meeting this need. However, there is a lack of information to guide the development of suitable emotion regulation DHIs for this population. Objective: The goal of the present study is to identify recommendations to guide the development of emotion regulation DHIs for adolescents with ADHD. Method: The current narrative review synthesises diverse relevant evidence to inform their development, including promising therapeutic approaches and components and relevant design and development considerations. Results: We find that there is very little direct evidence of ‘what works’ for emotion regulation DHIs and interventions more generally for adolescents with ADHD; however, we identify promising therapeutic approaches for new DHIs. We also recommend following a co-design or co-production approach with adolescents with ADHD, including exploring elements designed to motivate and engage young people to support sustained adherence. Conclusions: DHIs are a promising approach for emotion regulation interventions for adolescents with ADHD, could draw on a range of existing therapeutic approaches, and should be co-designed with users themselves.The research described within this report was supported by a Medical Research Foundation (MRF) grant (Reference: MRF-001-0014-RG-MURR-C0932) and AM was additionally supported by a Wellcome Trust Career Development Grant (REF: 225364/Z/22/Z).

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00