Digital video interventions and mental health literacy among young people a scoping review.pdf (2.22 MB)
Digital video interventions and mental health literacy among young people: a scoping review
journal contribution
posted on 2023-01-23, 16:51 authored by Sachiyo Ito-Jaeger, Emvira Perez Vallejos, Thomas Curran, Velvet Spors, Yunfei Long, Antonia LiguoriAntonia Liguori, Melaneia WarwickMelaneia Warwick, Michael WilsonMichael Wilson, Paul CrawfordBackground: Mental health literacy is important as it relates to understanding mental
illness, increasing help-seeking efficacy, and reducing mental illness-related stigma.
One method to improve the mental health literacy of young people is a digital video
intervention.
Aims: A scoping review was conducted to map existing research in the area of digital video interventions for mental health literacy among young people.
Methods: The scoping review was conducted following the PRISMA-ScR Checklist. All results were screened based on our inclusion criteria.
Results: Seventeen studies were selected for analysis. In most studies (n = 14), a digital video was the only intervention whereas three studies took a multi-intervention approach. Only two of the digital video interventions were co-created with people with mental illness or university students. All studies showed positive results in favor of digital video interventions in at least one component of mental health literacy or compared to one of the comparison conditions.
Conclusions: Digital video interventions represent effective tools for enhancing mental health literacy. However, there is a need for active involvement of end-users in cocreation and to attend to the production quality so that the digital video intervention is as relevant, informed, and effective as possible.
Aims: A scoping review was conducted to map existing research in the area of digital video interventions for mental health literacy among young people.
Methods: The scoping review was conducted following the PRISMA-ScR Checklist. All results were screened based on our inclusion criteria.
Results: Seventeen studies were selected for analysis. In most studies (n = 14), a digital video was the only intervention whereas three studies took a multi-intervention approach. Only two of the digital video interventions were co-created with people with mental illness or university students. All studies showed positive results in favor of digital video interventions in at least one component of mental health literacy or compared to one of the comparison conditions.
Conclusions: Digital video interventions represent effective tools for enhancing mental health literacy. However, there is a need for active involvement of end-users in cocreation and to attend to the production quality so that the digital video intervention is as relevant, informed, and effective as possible.
Funding
What's Up With Alex (WUWA)? Animated Storytelling for Mental Health Literacy Among Young People
Arts and Humanities Research Council
Find out more...History
School
- Design and Creative Arts
Department
- Creative Arts
Published in
Journal of Mental HealthVolume
31Issue
6Pages
873-883Publisher
Taylor & FrancisVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
© The AuthorsPublisher statement
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Taylor & Francis under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY 4.0). Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Acceptance date
2021-03-31Publication date
2021-05-19Copyright date
2021ISSN
0963-8237eISSN
1360-0567Publisher version
Language
- en