Hi all, 

See you this Wednesday for our session on Technology-Mediated Mental Health 
Support. Speaker/event details below. You can join our X4D-friends Google group 
to stay informed about future sessions. And stay tuned for details on our next 
session on AI and Social Good!

*** 

Dr. Munmun De Choudhury, School of Interactive Computing, Georgia Tech, USA
Title: Interdisciplinary and Collaborative Approaches to Digital Mental Health: 
A Tale of Engaging with Three Stakeholders
Digital traces, such as social media data, supported with advances in the 
computer science field, are increasingly being used to understand the mental 
health of individuals and populations. With these approaches offering promise 
to change the status quo in mental health for the first time since mid-20th 
century, interdisciplinary collaborations have been greatly emphasized. But 
what are some models of engagement for computer scientists that augment 
existing capabilities while minimizing the risk of harm? This talk will 
describe the experiences from working with three different stakeholders in 
projects relating to digital mental health–first with a governmental 
organization, second with healthcare providers, and third with a non-profit, 
all in the United States. The talk hopes to present some lessons learned by way 
of these engagements, and to reflect on approaches we need to realize a dream 
of many computer scientists: how to have their research contribute to positive 
societal impacts.

Dr. Becky Inkster, Department of Psychiatry, Cambridge University; Finance & 
Economics Programme, The Alan Turing Institute; Self-Employed Neuroscientist & 
Digital Mental Health Advisor, UK
Title: Rhymes Equal Actual Life in the Youth*: Connecting Mental Health Support 
with Hip-Hop Culture
It is essential that we build digital mental health tools that are engaging and 
sensitive to both culture and context. In this talk, I will explore how hip-hop 
music and culture can be combined in a powerful way with human-centred 
algorithmic solutions, computational creativity and music therapy in order to 
support mental health and wellbeing. I am a Co-Founder of LYRICAL KOMBAT and 
Hip Hop Psych, and will illustrate examples based on these initiatives.
*lyrics by KRS-ONE

Dr. John Naslund, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard 
Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Title: Design, Development, and Evaluation of a Digital Training Program for 
Building Capacity of Frontline Health Workers and Scaling Up Depression Care in 
Rural India
Mental disorders are a leading cause of disability worldwide; yet, in most 
countries, individuals living with mental disorders are more likely to have 
access to a mobile phone than basic mental health care. The increasing reach 
and availability of digital technologies in low-income and middle-income 
countries, such as smartphones and mobile Internet, present new opportunities 
to support task sharing through training and supporting community health 
workers in treating mental disorders. In this presentation, my objective is to 
describe the development and design of a digital program for training community 
health workers as part of a broader effort to scale up task sharing of a brief 
psychological treatment for depression in primary care settings in rural India. 
Specifically, I will describe efforts to involve community health workers 
throughout the iterative development and user testing of a digital training 
program accessible from a smartphone app, as well as the initial findings from 
a randomized controlled pilot study conducted in one district of Madhya 
Pradesh. I will discuss next steps and implications of leveraging emerging 
digital technologies for task sharing and bridging the global care gap for 
mental disorder.

Dr. Maryam Mustafa, School of Science and Engineering, LUMS, Pakistan
Title: Designing Digital Safe Spaces For Peer Support and Connectivity in 
Patriarchal Contexts
There is a deep stigma and taboo attached to mental health disorders and care 
in countries like Pakistan. Most people have little to no access to mental 
health support and women are particularly susceptible in patriarchal contexts 
like Pakistan. In this talk , I will explore the opportunities and challenges 
in designing peer-support and mental health mechanisms for low-income, 
low-literate women in Pakistan, a patriarchal and religious context where 
women’s movements, social relations and access to digital technologies are 
restricted. This is a context where shame and fear of defamation restrict the 
seeking of support for personal narratives around taboo subjects like abortion, 
sexual harassment, rape and domestic abuse. I will also discuss our findings 
from our participatory workshops in exploring the design of peer-support 
technologies for support seeking with low-income, low-literate women.

When: October 7 | 9.30am-11am US EDT (1.30pm-3pm UTC)
Where: https://ucl.zoom.us/j/95338644599
Link to calendar invite 


Warmly,
X4D Organizers

 

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