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UCL partners with YouTube to enhance availability of mental health information for young people

13 September 2024

Mental health experts from across UCL have launched a partnership with YouTube to address the shortage of high-quality mental health content available for children and young people.

Launch event for UCL x YouTube Health

Growing numbers of young people are turning to YouTube for information and advice. As a result, it is crucial that content is accurate and evidence-based, especially in relation to mental health.

Earlier this week, the collaboration between UCL and YouTube was launched with an event that saw mental health experts from across the university join forces with YouTube Health to discuss ambitious plans to train over 100 clinical academic staff on content creation, with hopes to create UCL鈥檚 own 鈥榗linical creators network鈥.

This network would share their expertise in mental health on the platform to ensure that the latest research findings are accessible to the young people searching for information online.

Speaking about the collaboration, event chair and organiser Dr Jenny Shand (UCL Psychology & Language Sciences), said: 鈥淟ast year, YouTube saw 950 million views on mental health condition videos in the UK. This staggering figure underscores the high demand for mental health content.

鈥淵ouTube offers accessibility to underserved communities who might not otherwise seek help听and this, paired with our UCL academics鈥 decades of expertise and cutting-edge mental health research, holds a lot of potential.鈥

Alongside training clinical academics, initiatives were also announced to co-create teaching materials around being a YouTube content creator for students and embed this into UCL course curricula to equip the next generation of 鈥榗linical creators鈥.

As the demand for mental health services continues to rise, accessible, expert-led content will be an effective way to provide those in need with informative and accurate advice.

Speaking at the panel discussion, Head of the UCL Division of Psychology and Language Sciences and clinical Professor Peter Fonagy CBE, said: 鈥淭his initiative presents a huge opportunity. Not just for the thousands of children and young people desperately searching for high-quality mental health information, but also potentially for specialist mental health services.

鈥淲e see the enormous and accumulating wait list pressure that these teams are put under, so I believe that there is real potential here to educate and inform young people and parents and elevate some of that pressure.鈥

Global Head of Healthcare and Public Health at Google/YouTube, Dr Garth Graham, said: 鈥淵ouTube Health is extremely proud to be partnering with UCL to support academic experts in making evidence-based mental health information and research videos accessible to the entire UK population and beyond.

鈥淭his is a vital initiative in our ongoing efforts to support youth mental wellbeing in particular on YouTube.鈥

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Image

  • Credit: Dr Jenny Shand

Media contact听

Poppy Tombs

E: p.tombs听[at] ucl.ac.uk