Molehill Mountain

Published by: Autistica apps
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Description

Molehill Mountain has been developed by Autistica and King’s College London to help autistic people understand and self-manage their anxiety.
We have worked with closely autistic people at every stage in developing Molehill Mountain to ensure that it is easy for autistic people to use and is relevant to their needs.
Molehill Mountain is based on Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT), a well-established and clinically proven technique for managing the symptoms of anxiety. The app has been developed with the full involvement of Professor Emily Simonoff, Dr Ann Ozsivadjian and Dr Rachel Kent from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King’s College London.
Most autistic people experience anxiety on a regular basis. Around eight out of ten will have symptoms of anxiety – and of these, three or four will have enough symptoms to be given a diagnosis of anxiety disorder.
Molehill Mountain allows you to track your worries and identify the situations that trigger your anxiety. Your daily check-ins are plotted on a chart which allows you to identify pattern and trends – and you can also display a previous check-in to help you identify recurring triggers for your anxiety.
Over time, you unlock tips that will help you to understand your anxiety and learn ways to manage it. The daily tips have been completely rewritten for this new version of Molehill Mountain. In addition, we have added dozens of extra mini-tips to cover many of the common causes of anxiety and stress in autistic people, such as hypersensitivity to noise, light and touch or difficulties with social situations and communication.
The app also has interactive CBT activities which you can use at any time. These draw upon well-established and clinically proven techniques and are designed to help you to recognise and overcome unhelpful patterns of thinking.
The development of Molehill Mountain has been supported by:
• The Maudsley Charity
• The Worshipful Company of Information Technologists’ Charity
• The Pixel Fund

Autistica
Autistica is the UK’s national autism research charity. They exist to create breakthroughs that enable every autistic person to live a happy, healthy and long life. They do so by:
• Shaping and growing research across the UK
• Funding new and innovative research solutions
• Campaigning for better services and shaping national policy
• Sharing evidence-based tools, resources, and information
https://www.autistica.org.uk/
@Autistica
The Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King’s College London
King’s College London is one of the top 10 UK universities in the world (QS World University Rankings, 2018/19) and among the oldest in England. King’s has more than 31,000 students (including more than 12,800 postgraduates) from some 150 countries worldwide, and some 8,500 staff.
The Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King’s College London is the premier centre for mental health and related neurosciences research in Europe. It produces more highly cited outputs (top 1% citations) on mental health than any other centre (SciVal 2019) and on this metric we have risen from 16th (2014) to 4th (2019) in the world for highly cited neuroscience outputs. World-leading research from the IoPPN has made, and continues to make, an impact on how we understand, prevent and treat mental illness and other conditions that affect the brain.
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/ioppn
@KingsIoPPN
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    Yes, Molehill Mountain is completely free and it doesn't have any in-app purchases or subscriptions.

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User Rating

4.25 out of 5

4 ratings in New Zealand

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Ratings History

Molehill Mountain Reviews

Great tracker for Autistic people

HsauvaKirvssubxst on

United Kingdom

I was recommended this app through Mental Health Access To Work. I was sceptical at first, and it took a little while to get into it. But I really like it now. It’s specifically for autistic people as you track your worries and concerns overtime, you can see the things that bother you the most. You can also see whether or not. It’s a general anxiety, a specific anxiety, sensory anxiety or a social anxiety. I actually found this quite helpful to break it down into the sections. Every now, and again you’ll unlock some extra learning/knowledge about autism and anxiety. I’m not sure if it’s anything new, but certainly a great reminder! (Poor memory!) There are specific breathing exercises, and a section where you can think about your worries, and then tap and lock them away… meh… I have written to Kings College, who are the creators of the app and made a number of suggestions for improvements. But for now I think it’s pretty good. I think generally it helps with self-awareness.

Upsetting.

Warm Purple Pony on

United Kingdom

My sister used this app for years to help her with many of difficulties. When the recent update logged her out, she’s never been able to login since, and she is devastated by it. She’s tried reinstalling, and asking for a new password and she’s never been given one (despite the numerous tries). Starting a new account is too much for her as well. My sister won’t recommend this app from now on, until the fault for her (and perhaps many others) is fixed.

Not great

Indigohues on

United Kingdom

I’m not impressed with this app. It’s really basic and badly thought out. It’s also quite patronising. I was told about this app after I got my ASD diagnosis by my assessors. I also have PTSD and the best app ever has to be “PTSD Coach”. The exercises, tracker, listing feelings (very good if difficulty identifying these) are without comparison. As about 40-50% of people with ASD also have an anxiety disorder, the exercises on PTSD Coach are really good. For the developers of this app: check out PTSD Coach- learn and do better. Molehill Mountain is not good enough, needs improving and I would not recommend it in its present form.

Dreadful app for anyone with ASD

Buffalump on

United Kingdom

As a person with ASD, I find the amount of typos in this app extremely irritating. I can’t see any modifications here for people with ASD. It says to log in once a day but is that as a minimum or should we log in regularly throughout the day if it’s supposed to be a journal? Lots of us with ASD have poor short-term memory and if I log in once a day it may be that at that time my anxiety is quite low but has been extremely earlier in the day. It’s not really keeping track of my anxiety throughout the day in that case. I often wake up with severe anxiety which can diminish as the day goes on or get even worse depending on multiple factors. Also, the fields for entering info are far too small meaning you can’t read what’s on the balloons. I don’t see the point of this app, I might as well just go back to using my online journal. I agree with previous posters that Autistica should not be promoting this app. It’s terrible for autistic people who need clear instructions and are often extremely irritated by typos.

Molehill

Jacobite72 on

United Kingdom

A really nice simple informative app with checkins for autistic people.

Poor - no support and changes unpredictably

Fray 51 on

United Kingdom

This is not usable as it currently stands. It is sad to see a charity endorsing a product that so obviously wasn’t ready for release. Lots of typos throughout the app - not a respectful way to treat young people with ASD. The game changed with no warning (from moles popping out to balloon popping) and the game is a poor format - same every time, no stretch for the child as the max score is so low. If your worries are long you can’t even read them when you are popping the balloons. My child was also very upset that this app automatically upgraded with no warning. Surely for people with ASD who struggle with change this should have been considered and flagged? All his diary entries were wiped from before and the system wouldn’t allow me to recover the old profile. Unreliable and no support from the makers when things go wrong.

Autism

Aquackanack on

United Kingdom

I have autism. This application is amazing! Extremely helpful. Thank you

Simple and understandable

Believe it to see it on

United Kingdom

Recommend by my doctor and has helped me in my understanding of conditions and my likelihood of having it. Simply worded and makes it easier to understand.

DONT USE if you’re autistic!

D4ithi on

United Kingdom

The process is daunting. You have to fill in ‘activities’ and triggers yourself. But when you come back to use it and have to select which triggers and actions apply you can’t read you’ve previously entered because the text field on the selection buttons is too small and won’t expand. There’s only enough room for maybe two words. How can you explain a trigger or action in one or two words?! I clicked on ‘help’ to find a totally blank page, nothing, zero, no help of any sort. I looked for a way of ensuring I could unsubscribe from everything and make sure they kept no data but there’s only an email unsubscribe. So they gave me a massive acute anxiety attack when I realised I’d been scammed for some sort of research project. Maybe it’s designed to wind up autistic people as a psychological test to see what we’ll do? I don’t know but avoid this app and don’t let it give you an anxiety attack

Old Man Bull 🌈♾review

Old Man Bull on

United Kingdom

I think this CBT-based app can be helpful in developing emotional literacy, learning to focus on the experience of the body and what is called mind, but it doesn’t really take into account that learning to think differently and avoid less is ultimately limiting as an approach. As an autistic man, I know that even having spent multiple years in yoga developing mindful practice, and after several years of psychotherapy, some situations provoke severe anxiety owing solely to the sensory, social and cognitive input (for want of a better turn of phrase!) and all I can do is choose to stay with that anxiety (accepting my thoughts, my experience and live with the fallout, in terms of stress) or avoid it. This app completely misses the need to identify as autistic and learning to self-advocate, to self-limit and say ‘Not today, do I want to be exposed to this neurotypical milieu!’ I couldn’t really see where the autistic adaptations were, except for asking me to think about worries connected to sensory input. Overall, not bad, 3 stars. But where’s the autistic input? ♾ 🌈😊

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