A very useful beginners guide to social networking iRO mental health

Are we going to dabble our toes in the waters edge or dive straight in??

Social Media in Mental Health Practice
- online network tools for recovery and living well
by Victoria Betton and Victoria Tomlinson (2013)

http://www.leedspft.nhs.uk/professionals/digitalhealthinnovation

Social Media in Mental Health Practice is a social media guide for health and social care practitioners working in mental health services.

The e-book gives a broad overview of key social media that can be used to help people as part of their recovery and living well from peer support in online forums and using apps to send mental health advice direct to a mobile phone to using Pinterest for inspiration and Twitter to build social and support networks.

Written in plain English for ‘non-techies’ and packed with case studies, it describes how social media is already being used in day-to-day mental health practice, and backs this up with examples of good practice.



Guest Post: Supporting practitioners to make sense of social media in mental health practice
Victoria Betton deputy director of strategy and partnerships at Leeds and York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust discusses her new e-book Social Media in Mental Health Practice co-written with Victoria Tomlinson from Northern Lights PR.

http://shirleyayres.wordpress.com/2013/03/21/guest-post-supporting-...

I use every opportunity to chat to people using and working in mental health services about social media. And what I experience is disconnect. Many practitioners are fearful. Many more are excited by the possibilities but not sure where to start. A smaller number are already confidently using social media to connect, network and innovate. Most are predominantly thinking about their use of social media in relation to personal/professional identity and ensuring their online behaviours are consistent with guidance from their professional body or organisation.

What I see much less of, is practitioners having the opportunity to consider how social media may form a part of their toolkit – helping people think about recovery in the context of their online as well as their offline lives and the interplay between the two. At the same time I see many people with lived experience using all sorts of social media to take control, connect with peers, campaign, have fun and develop.

There is where I see the disconnect and this is where the idea for Social Media in Mental Health Practice came from – a desire to capture many of the fantastic ways in which social media are already being used, to amplify, and to give practitioners ideas and tips about how they might incorporate this knowledge into their day-to-day practice. It isn’t a ‘how to’ book and it isn’t about professional identity. Its purpose is to help mental health practitioners who are new to social media, consider the possibilities and the challenges, by finding out from those who are already innovating – both people using mental health services and people working within them.

I am always struck by the kindness and supportiveness of the community I have discovered in social media spaces – particularly Twitter. Victoria (co-author) and I could not have written this book without the generosity and willingness of many people to share their experiences – this in itself is a testament to the positive potential of social media. We are also incredibly grateful to Helen Bevan, chief of transformation at the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement, for supporting and funding the development of this e-book – another person who I initially connected with on Twitter.

This e-book captures a particular point in time – I hope it will quickly become out-of-date and redundant, as more and more mental health practitioners become increasingly familiar with the potential of social media for supporting recovery focused practice.


Book reviews

I really like the easy, clear and uncluttered style of it. If only all technology-related guides were written this way...emphasising what it's really about, better communication between people, not messing about with IT for the sake of it.

Sheena Hastings, chief feature writer, Yorkshire Post

This is a really useful and readable guide to introduce people working in mental health to social media and to explain why not engaging isn't really an option any more. It's full of useful case studies with lots of hints and tips on how to get started and things to think of carefully around boundaries and ethics. Most importantly, it conveys really well the massive learning and sharing opportunities available and the fantastic mutual support people can gain by connecting online.

Niccola Swan, director, Leeds Mind

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