Advancing the Actionability of Mental Health Information: Identifying Online, Evidence-Based Mental Health Resources

Adm Policy Ment Health. 2023 Sep;50(5):773-780. doi: 10.1007/s10488-023-01276-9. Epub 2023 Jun 2.

Abstract

To improve the dissemination and actionability of mental health research, many mental health professionals have developed online informational resources to increase the general public's awareness of mental health difficulties and available treatments. Yet, limited information exists on the quality and scope of these resources. This study aimed to explore the scope and quantity of online, free, evidence-based mental health resources. Fifty-two mental health professionals nominated 178 resources, which predominantly consisted of homepages and links to more information. When reviewing the original nominations, our team identified an additional 290 resources (e.g., fact sheets linked from a nominated homepage). Of the 468 total nominated resources, 72 were screened out due to not meeting the inclusion criteria of being free (inter-screener reliability = 95%), evidence-based (inter-screener reliability = 94%), and online (inter-screener reliability = 96%). Nominated resources most commonly covered anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder (n = 67) and suicide (n = 60). Resources providing information about the mental health problem were most common (n = 210) and resources providing information about immediate help (e.g., hotline) were least common (n = 57). Our findings indicate many free, online, evidence-based resources are available and raise questions of whether efforts to disseminate mental health research are recreating the issue of information overload. Other considerations and future directions for improving the utilization and synthesizing of available resources are discussed.

Keywords: Dissemination; Evidence-based information; Knowledge-to-action; Mental health.

MeSH terms

  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Health Resources
  • Humans
  • Mental Health*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Suicide*