Sharing information about mental health services

To reach adolescents where they are, we need to market early help provision on social media

  • Loades, Maria E
  • Desrochers, Debra M
  • Edgar, Sally
  • Luximon, Melanie
  • Sung, Beatrice
Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry 29(1):p 10-14, January 2024. | DOI: 10.1177/13591045231209800

There is a large and widening gap between the need for mental health help and timely access to services for adolescents. To enable adolescents to access evidence-based help when they first begin to struggle, we need widespread public health messaging which promotes prompt problem recognition and encourages and facilitates help-seeking. Current messaging approaches are often to share information on websites, but adolescents do not tend to look at these. Adolescents have an almost ubiquitous presence on social media, including using these platforms to seek information and support. As mental health professionals and researchers, we need to capitalise on their presence in this space and share messages about early help and support in ways that are engaging, relevant, credible, and perceived to be trustworthy by adolescents. To do this, we need to learn from our interdisciplinary colleagues with social marketing expertise, and from co-designing messages and messaging strategies with adolescents themselves. We illustrate the unique value that each of these partners can bring to improve how information about early help for mental health is shared.

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