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{{PDFCite|file=https://theactionalliance.org/sites/default/files/action_alliance_marketing_handout_2.pdf|citation=Ensuring public messaging about suicide and suicide prevention is accurate, safe, helpful, and effective|page=2}} <code>passed</code> | {{PDFCite|file=https://theactionalliance.org/sites/default/files/action_alliance_marketing_handout_2.pdf|citation=Ensuring public messaging about suicide and suicide prevention is accurate, safe, helpful, and effective|page=2}} <code>passed</code> | ||
== Placeholder for Beliefs and Contexty Things == | |||
=== Active Research === | |||
The Network Health Approach describes tools and methods that are under active study, development, and use. | |||
This means that this toolkit will be updated as new research dictates, and, most importantly the version history will reflect changes accurately. | |||
To ensure that you have the latest information, you can check the most recent update date on any page in this wiki, view and read the full version history, see when it was last peer-reviewed, sign up for updates to this toolkit, join our discussion group, and apply to become an editor. | |||
We will update this with new research as it develops. We have a research page where new contexts in which these tools can be used will be described as the tools are applied, researched, and tested within them. | |||
=== Schools First === | |||
Throughout this toolkit, we will assume the context of a school. We are focused on helping there because the need for preventative solutions and research is strong. However, this approach has been proven effective in other contexts such as in the United States Air Force, Police departments, and other contexts you can learn more about on the research page. | |||
=== Universality of the Approach === | |||
Programs are developed from approaches. Ecological validity is one part of the Network Health Approach that demands that a program is developed specifically and uniquely for a community - that’s what makes this approach so broadly applicable. This contention is supported by researched implementation across a breadth of communities. | |||
Difference from previous approaches | |||
A network health approach to preventative care builds individual and community protective factors and social norms. Network health approaches that address these processes, such as maximizing youth-adult connections schoolwide and heightening influence of youth with coping, create more protective schools. | |||
=== Historical Context === | |||
The history of preventative mental health care is beyond the scope of this wiki, but it is worth arguing that the characteristics of this approach are different than what has been created in the societies of most of the world over the last 100 years, but they are not that different from what existed and still does exist in most cultures in the more distant past. Not an immediate focus, but the fact that research has taken humanity full circle to rediscovered excellence is notable and in some cases relevant. | |||
=== Medical Model v. Strengths model === | |||
The medical model of care requires identification of a weakness to begin recommending treatment. In mental health care, some issues have no strong correlates that can be identified as weaknesses early on. Interestingly, there are correlates that can be identified as risk factors in communities that are much stronger indicators of future risk, and more readily identifiable, than individual risk factors. In some cases, strengths-based models that seek to identify strengths of individuals and communities have been shown to be more effective in reducing risk factors than a weakness-based medical model. Treating a community preventatively withy a strengths based-model can also be done without isolating individuals as weak links, separating them from connections. Instead, a strengths based preventative care program identifies strengths and integrates individuals into broader communities. | |||
In the parlance of Social Emotional Learning in US schools there Tiers - Tier 1 (prevention-based) comes before Tier 3 (isolation-based) because it is, colloquially, terrible to have to isolate people - generally, Tier 1 is the success case and Tier 3 is the last line of defense for individuals who need it. This is appropriate prioritization from the perspective of a social network health approach. In practical implementation, however, far fewer communities put as many resources into effective Tier 1 programming as Tier 3. | |||
TBD - We could make a matrix of all the characteristics of programs out there and see where this approach fits - that might be overkill to start with, but it would be useful to those who are trying to find the right approach in a sea of approaches. |
Revision as of 07:08, 24 July 2024
Introduction
This toolkit exists to make freely available and accessible the theory, practical Implementation, and research in the field of Social Network Health.
Major Sections
Theory - How do Social Network Health approaches to preventative mental health care improve lives and communities, and fit into a holistic system of health care?
Practical Implementation - What are fundamentals of practical implementation of a social network health approach?
Research Library - Primary resources, seminal research, educational video explainers, and links to external resources.
Notes:
Note to Readers: this is an extremely early version of a site meant to describe Social Network Health approaches. DO NOT use this as an implementation guide and do not quote this toolkit anywhere until this note is removed. Once we reach alpha stage in July 2024, we will update this note and release the entire toolkit under a creative commons attribution non-commercial no-derivatives license only. As much as we would like to allow derivatives, the precautionary language on the Social Network Health site, and all mental health resources, is critical to maintain in it’s precise form. We will be looking into less restrictive licenses in the future.
Note on page name: This is the Theoretical Overview so "Main Page" has been replaced, unless we want to have overview and context here, and then link out to the three main sections: Theoretical Orientation, Practical Implementation, and Research Library
Crisis - TBD: Humanity is experiencing a crisis in mental health. Note: that probably doesn't belong on this page - unless we want another page on context.
Note: the summary could be a prelude to a section on the 14 points, or could be renamed and replaced entirely
Testing PDF:Cite
Test of PDF:Cite using file on wikivisor.
PDF passed
Another test of PDF:Cite for a file stored in google drive (anyone with the link can view): PDF failed
no direct access to the file
Another test using wayback machine pdf:PDF failed
no direct access to the file
More tests:
PDF passed
PDF passed
Placeholder for Beliefs and Contexty Things
Active Research
The Network Health Approach describes tools and methods that are under active study, development, and use.
This means that this toolkit will be updated as new research dictates, and, most importantly the version history will reflect changes accurately.
To ensure that you have the latest information, you can check the most recent update date on any page in this wiki, view and read the full version history, see when it was last peer-reviewed, sign up for updates to this toolkit, join our discussion group, and apply to become an editor.
We will update this with new research as it develops. We have a research page where new contexts in which these tools can be used will be described as the tools are applied, researched, and tested within them.
Schools First
Throughout this toolkit, we will assume the context of a school. We are focused on helping there because the need for preventative solutions and research is strong. However, this approach has been proven effective in other contexts such as in the United States Air Force, Police departments, and other contexts you can learn more about on the research page.
Universality of the Approach
Programs are developed from approaches. Ecological validity is one part of the Network Health Approach that demands that a program is developed specifically and uniquely for a community - that’s what makes this approach so broadly applicable. This contention is supported by researched implementation across a breadth of communities.
Difference from previous approaches
A network health approach to preventative care builds individual and community protective factors and social norms. Network health approaches that address these processes, such as maximizing youth-adult connections schoolwide and heightening influence of youth with coping, create more protective schools.
Historical Context
The history of preventative mental health care is beyond the scope of this wiki, but it is worth arguing that the characteristics of this approach are different than what has been created in the societies of most of the world over the last 100 years, but they are not that different from what existed and still does exist in most cultures in the more distant past. Not an immediate focus, but the fact that research has taken humanity full circle to rediscovered excellence is notable and in some cases relevant.
Medical Model v. Strengths model
The medical model of care requires identification of a weakness to begin recommending treatment. In mental health care, some issues have no strong correlates that can be identified as weaknesses early on. Interestingly, there are correlates that can be identified as risk factors in communities that are much stronger indicators of future risk, and more readily identifiable, than individual risk factors. In some cases, strengths-based models that seek to identify strengths of individuals and communities have been shown to be more effective in reducing risk factors than a weakness-based medical model. Treating a community preventatively withy a strengths based-model can also be done without isolating individuals as weak links, separating them from connections. Instead, a strengths based preventative care program identifies strengths and integrates individuals into broader communities.
In the parlance of Social Emotional Learning in US schools there Tiers - Tier 1 (prevention-based) comes before Tier 3 (isolation-based) because it is, colloquially, terrible to have to isolate people - generally, Tier 1 is the success case and Tier 3 is the last line of defense for individuals who need it. This is appropriate prioritization from the perspective of a social network health approach. In practical implementation, however, far fewer communities put as many resources into effective Tier 1 programming as Tier 3.
TBD - We could make a matrix of all the characteristics of programs out there and see where this approach fits - that might be overkill to start with, but it would be useful to those who are trying to find the right approach in a sea of approaches.