A practical guide to social media in mental health practice

This new 30-page guide is pitched at the novice and includes an introduction to social media and some very clear explanations about the different websites and techniques that you need to get up and running.

There are a number of case studies that illustrate the power and reach of Twitter, Facebook, online communities, mobile apps and blogs.

Read the guide.

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Comment by julie gosling on April 11, 2013 at 15:24

Comment by julie gosling 1 second ago Delete Comment

I am excited by the potential of internet to facilitate well-being and transform the lives of people living with distress.

I am equally dispirited to learn of draft policies in this part of NHS land that will potentially empower practitioners to:

remove mobile phones from people on mental health wards in the interests of limiting video, photograph and recording in the interests of public protection and confidentiality

decide furthermore - on patients behalf - which internet sites are 'permissible' for them to access

I wonder what freedoms are being enhanced and whose best interests protected ......?

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