Andalibi Nazanin, Flood Madison K
University of Michigan School of Information, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
Department of History of Art, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
JMIR Ment Health. 2021 Jan 4;8(1):e21819. doi: 10.2196/21819.
Peer support is an approach to cope with mental illness, and technology provides a way to facilitate peer support. However, there are barriers to seeking support in offline and technology-mediated contexts.
This study aims to uncover potential ways to design digital mental health peer support systems and to outline a set of principles for future designers to consider as they embark on designing these systems. By learning how existing systems are used by people in daily life and by centering their experiences, we can better understand how to design mental health peer support technologies that foreground people's needs. One existing digital peer support system is Buddy Project, the case study in this paper.
This paper reports on an interview study with Buddy Project users (N=13). Data were analyzed using the constant comparative approach.
Individuals matched through Buddy Project developed supportive friendships with one another, leading them to become each other's peer supporters in their respective journeys. It was not only the mental health peer support that was important to participants but also being able to connect over other parts of their lives and identities. The design of Buddy Project provided a sense of anonymity and separation from pre-existing ties, making it easier for participants to disclose struggles; moreover, the pairs appreciated being able to browse each other's social media pages before connecting. Buddy Project has an explicit mission to prevent suicide and demonstrates this mission across its online platforms, which helps reduce the stigma around mental health within the peer support space. Pairs were matched based on shared interests and identities. This choice aided the pairs in developing meaningful, compatible, and supportive relationships with each other, where they felt seen and understood. However, the pairs were concerned that matching based on a shared mental health diagnosis may lead to sharing unhealthy coping mechanisms or comparing themselves and the severity of their experiences with their peers.
The results of this study shed light on desirable features of a digital mental health peer support system: matching peers based on interests and identities that they self-identify with; having an explicit mental health-related mission coupled with social media and other web-based presences to signal that discussing mental health is safe within the peer support ecosystem; and not matching peers based on a broad mental health diagnosis. However, if the diagnosis is important, this matching should account for illness severity and educate peers on how to provide support while avoiding suggesting unhelpful coping mechanisms; allowing for some degree of anonymity and control over how peers present themselves to each other; and providing relevant information and tools to potential peers to help them decide if they would like to embark on a relationship with their matched peer before connecting with them.
同伴支持是一种应对精神疾病的方法,而技术为促进同伴支持提供了途径。然而,在离线和技术介导的环境中寻求支持存在障碍。
本研究旨在揭示设计数字心理健康同伴支持系统的潜在方法,并为未来的设计师在着手设计这些系统时概述一套需要考虑的原则。通过了解人们在日常生活中如何使用现有系统并以他们的体验为中心,我们可以更好地理解如何设计以人们需求为重点的心理健康同伴支持技术。一个现有的数字同伴支持系统是“好友计划”,本文将对其进行案例研究。
本文报告了一项对“好友计划”用户(N = 13)的访谈研究。使用持续比较法对数据进行分析。
通过“好友计划”匹配的个体彼此建立了支持性的友谊,使他们在各自的旅程中成为彼此的同伴支持者。对参与者来说,重要的不仅是心理健康同伴支持,还包括能够在生活和身份的其他方面建立联系。“好友计划”的设计提供了一种匿名感,并与既有的关系相分离,这使得参与者更容易披露自己的困扰;此外,配对双方很欣赏在建立联系之前能够浏览彼此的社交媒体页面。“好友计划”有一个明确的预防自杀使命,并在其在线平台上展示这一使命,这有助于减少同伴支持空间内围绕心理健康的污名化。配对是基于共同兴趣和身份进行的。这种选择有助于配对双方建立有意义、相互兼容且相互支持的关系,在这种关系中他们感到被关注和理解。然而,配对双方担心基于共同的心理健康诊断进行匹配可能会导致分享不健康的应对机制,或者将自己与同伴在经历的严重程度上进行比较。
本研究结果揭示了数字心理健康同伴支持系统的理想特征:基于同伴自我认同的兴趣和身份进行配对;有一个明确的与心理健康相关的使命,并结合社交媒体和其他基于网络的存在,以表明在同伴支持生态系统中讨论心理健康是安全的;不基于宽泛的心理健康诊断进行配对。然而,如果诊断很重要,这种匹配应该考虑疾病的严重程度,并教育同伴如何提供支持,同时避免暗示无益的应对机制;允许一定程度的匿名性,并让同伴能够控制彼此展示自己的方式;为潜在同伴提供相关信息和工具,以帮助他们在与匹配的同伴建立联系之前决定是否愿意与对方建立关系。