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#onlinetherapy — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #onlinetherapy, aggregated by home.social.

  1. DATE: May 13, 2026 at 08:00PM
    SOURCE: PSYPOST.ORG

    ** Research quality varies widely from fantastic to small exploratory studies. Please check research methods when conclusions are very important to you. **
    -------------------------------------------------

    TITLE: Study reveals the key ingredients for successful social media mental health interventions

    URL: psypost.org/study-reveals-the-

    A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials testing the effects of social-media-based mental health interventions found that they lead to moderate-high reductions in stress symptoms and low-moderate reductions in depression and anxiety symptom severity. The interventions were more effective when participants were more than 70% female, when the programs were human-guided, social-oriented, and when effects were compared to groups that received care as usual. The paper was published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.

    More than 1 in 8 adults and adolescents worldwide live with a mental disorder. The two most common types of mental health disorders are anxiety disorders and depression. However, estimates state that only a small fraction of individuals suffering from mental health disorders receive a treatment that results in the remission of symptoms. That is why scientists are looking for new ways to provide mental health treatments at scale to people who need them.

    One prospective type of treatment that can be delivered at scale are online mental health interventions, particularly interventions delivered through social-media-based programs. These interventions represent organized efforts to provide psychological support, education, coping skills, or behavior-change strategies through platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, Reddit, or other online communities.

    They include therapist-led groups, peer-support communities, psychoeducational posts, chat-based guidance, mood tracking, crisis resources, or structured activities based on approaches such as cognitive-behavioral therapy or mindfulness. These programs can make support more accessible because many people already use social media regularly and may find it easier to engage online than in traditional services. However, their quality, privacy protections, safety procedures, and effectiveness vary, with studies reporting inconsistent results about their effectiveness.

    Study author Qiyang Zhang and her colleagues wanted to integrate the findings of rigorously designed randomized controlled trials examining the effectiveness of social-media-based mental health interventions in reducing mental health symptoms. They were interested in the overall impact of these treatments on symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, negative affect, and psychological distress. These researchers also wanted to know how much these effects depend on the methodological specificities of studies and programs, such as program duration, program focus, or the control group the treatment was compared with.

    They conducted a meta-analysis. The first author of this study conducted a search of databases of published scientific reports that included the Education Resources Information Center, PsychINFO, Scopus, PsychArticles, Communication and Mass Media Complete, PubMed, and Proquest databases. She also searched for studies through Paperfetcher across journals in the field the study authors considered reputable, and examined the reference lists of the papers they found.

    Study authors looked for studies that reported results of randomized controlled trials with at least 30 participants per experimental condition. The intervention examined in the study needed to be delivered through social media platforms (e.g., Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and WeChat), and the difference in mental health symptoms between groups undergoing different treatments needed to be small at the start. Additionally, the interventions needed to be delivered by nonresearchers to better reflect how these programs would function in the real world.

    They also required the difference between the number of participants who did not finish the study (the attrition rate) in the compared treatment conditions to be less than 15%. In this way, they wanted to reduce the risk that the observed treatment differences were caused by different dropout rates. For example, if participants who benefited least, or those who experienced the strongest effects or adverse experiences, left one condition more often than the other, the remaining participants could become systematically different, biasing the results.

    In the end, after screening over 11,000 published studies, 17 studies met all the criteria the study authors defined. These studies reported the effects of 22 distinct intervention programs, comprising 5,624 total participants. Of these programs, 7 were conducted on adolescents, 7 on people in early adulthood, 7 included middle adulthood participants, while 1 study was of older individuals.

    Twelve studies had more than 70% female participants. In 9 studies, participants were recruited based on a specific clinical condition.

    Overall, the results showed that the examined studies had a low-moderate beneficial effect on mental health symptoms. The symptom reduction was the strongest for stress symptoms and it was moderate-high in size. Effects on reducing anxiety and depression symptoms were low-moderate.

    Further analyses found that the examined social-media-based interventions tended to be more effective when the studies were conducted on groups that were more than 70% female, when the programs were human-guided (i.e., guided by humans including therapists, coaches, or research assistants), social-oriented (i.e., programs that provide mainly social interaction, emotional support, or companionship), and when control groups were people who received care as usual (i.e., where control group participants received standard care as opposed to waitlist groups). Interestingly, the researchers found that a participant’s age did not significantly affect the outcomes of the intervention.

    “This meta-analysis synthesized the best evidence on this topic and found that, overall, high-quality social-media-based RCTs [randomized controlled trials] were effective in reducing depression, anxiety, stress, negative affect, and psychological distress. Given the benefits of scalability and cost-effectiveness of social-media-based approaches, mental health services should consider integrating online interventions into routine practice,” the study authors concluded.

    The study contributes to the scientific understanding of the mental health effects of social-media-based mental health interventions. However, the study authors note that the statistical power of their review was limited by the small sample size of available, high-quality studies. Furthermore, the reported effects are not generalizable to all social-media-based mental health interventions. In each case, the effects of a specific intervention depend on its particular characteristics and on its appropriateness for the mental health condition or difficulties that individuals undergoing the intervention are experiencing.

    The paper, “Social-Media-Based Mental Health Interventions: Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials,” was authored by Qiyang Zhang, Zixuan Huang, Yuan Sui, Fu-Hung Lin, Hongjie Guan, Li Li, Ke Wang, and Amanda Neitzel.

    URL: psypost.org/study-reveals-the-

    -------------------------------------------------

    DAILY EMAIL DIGEST: Email [email protected] -- no subject or message needed.

    Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

    Unofficial Psychology Today Xitter to toot feed at Psych Today Unofficial Bot @PTUnofficialBot

    NYU Information for Practice puts out 400-500 good quality health-related research posts per week but its too much for many people, so that bot is limited to just subscribers. You can read it or subscribe at @PsychResearchBot

    Since 1991 The National Psychologist has focused on keeping practicing psychologists current with news, information and items of interest. Check them out for more free articles, resources, and subscription information: nationalpsychologist.com

    EMAIL DAILY DIGEST OF RSS FEEDS -- SUBSCRIBE: subscribe-article-digests.clin

    READ ONLINE: read-the-rss-mega-archive.clin

    It's primitive... but it works... mostly...

    -------------------------------------------------

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #depression #psychotherapist #SocialMediaMentalHealth #MentalHealthInterventions #OnlineTherapy #SocialSupportOnline #CBT #Mindfulness #DigitalHealth #StressReduction #AnxietyHelp #DepressionSupport

  2. DATE: May 13, 2026 at 08:00PM
    SOURCE: PSYPOST.ORG

    ** Research quality varies widely from fantastic to small exploratory studies. Please check research methods when conclusions are very important to you. **
    -------------------------------------------------

    TITLE: Study reveals the key ingredients for successful social media mental health interventions

    URL: psypost.org/study-reveals-the-

    A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials testing the effects of social-media-based mental health interventions found that they lead to moderate-high reductions in stress symptoms and low-moderate reductions in depression and anxiety symptom severity. The interventions were more effective when participants were more than 70% female, when the programs were human-guided, social-oriented, and when effects were compared to groups that received care as usual. The paper was published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.

    More than 1 in 8 adults and adolescents worldwide live with a mental disorder. The two most common types of mental health disorders are anxiety disorders and depression. However, estimates state that only a small fraction of individuals suffering from mental health disorders receive a treatment that results in the remission of symptoms. That is why scientists are looking for new ways to provide mental health treatments at scale to people who need them.

    One prospective type of treatment that can be delivered at scale are online mental health interventions, particularly interventions delivered through social-media-based programs. These interventions represent organized efforts to provide psychological support, education, coping skills, or behavior-change strategies through platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, Reddit, or other online communities.

    They include therapist-led groups, peer-support communities, psychoeducational posts, chat-based guidance, mood tracking, crisis resources, or structured activities based on approaches such as cognitive-behavioral therapy or mindfulness. These programs can make support more accessible because many people already use social media regularly and may find it easier to engage online than in traditional services. However, their quality, privacy protections, safety procedures, and effectiveness vary, with studies reporting inconsistent results about their effectiveness.

    Study author Qiyang Zhang and her colleagues wanted to integrate the findings of rigorously designed randomized controlled trials examining the effectiveness of social-media-based mental health interventions in reducing mental health symptoms. They were interested in the overall impact of these treatments on symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, negative affect, and psychological distress. These researchers also wanted to know how much these effects depend on the methodological specificities of studies and programs, such as program duration, program focus, or the control group the treatment was compared with.

    They conducted a meta-analysis. The first author of this study conducted a search of databases of published scientific reports that included the Education Resources Information Center, PsychINFO, Scopus, PsychArticles, Communication and Mass Media Complete, PubMed, and Proquest databases. She also searched for studies through Paperfetcher across journals in the field the study authors considered reputable, and examined the reference lists of the papers they found.

    Study authors looked for studies that reported results of randomized controlled trials with at least 30 participants per experimental condition. The intervention examined in the study needed to be delivered through social media platforms (e.g., Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and WeChat), and the difference in mental health symptoms between groups undergoing different treatments needed to be small at the start. Additionally, the interventions needed to be delivered by nonresearchers to better reflect how these programs would function in the real world.

    They also required the difference between the number of participants who did not finish the study (the attrition rate) in the compared treatment conditions to be less than 15%. In this way, they wanted to reduce the risk that the observed treatment differences were caused by different dropout rates. For example, if participants who benefited least, or those who experienced the strongest effects or adverse experiences, left one condition more often than the other, the remaining participants could become systematically different, biasing the results.

    In the end, after screening over 11,000 published studies, 17 studies met all the criteria the study authors defined. These studies reported the effects of 22 distinct intervention programs, comprising 5,624 total participants. Of these programs, 7 were conducted on adolescents, 7 on people in early adulthood, 7 included middle adulthood participants, while 1 study was of older individuals.

    Twelve studies had more than 70% female participants. In 9 studies, participants were recruited based on a specific clinical condition.

    Overall, the results showed that the examined studies had a low-moderate beneficial effect on mental health symptoms. The symptom reduction was the strongest for stress symptoms and it was moderate-high in size. Effects on reducing anxiety and depression symptoms were low-moderate.

    Further analyses found that the examined social-media-based interventions tended to be more effective when the studies were conducted on groups that were more than 70% female, when the programs were human-guided (i.e., guided by humans including therapists, coaches, or research assistants), social-oriented (i.e., programs that provide mainly social interaction, emotional support, or companionship), and when control groups were people who received care as usual (i.e., where control group participants received standard care as opposed to waitlist groups). Interestingly, the researchers found that a participant’s age did not significantly affect the outcomes of the intervention.

    “This meta-analysis synthesized the best evidence on this topic and found that, overall, high-quality social-media-based RCTs [randomized controlled trials] were effective in reducing depression, anxiety, stress, negative affect, and psychological distress. Given the benefits of scalability and cost-effectiveness of social-media-based approaches, mental health services should consider integrating online interventions into routine practice,” the study authors concluded.

    The study contributes to the scientific understanding of the mental health effects of social-media-based mental health interventions. However, the study authors note that the statistical power of their review was limited by the small sample size of available, high-quality studies. Furthermore, the reported effects are not generalizable to all social-media-based mental health interventions. In each case, the effects of a specific intervention depend on its particular characteristics and on its appropriateness for the mental health condition or difficulties that individuals undergoing the intervention are experiencing.

    The paper, “Social-Media-Based Mental Health Interventions: Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials,” was authored by Qiyang Zhang, Zixuan Huang, Yuan Sui, Fu-Hung Lin, Hongjie Guan, Li Li, Ke Wang, and Amanda Neitzel.

    URL: psypost.org/study-reveals-the-

    -------------------------------------------------

    DAILY EMAIL DIGEST: Email [email protected] -- no subject or message needed.

    Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

    Unofficial Psychology Today Xitter to toot feed at Psych Today Unofficial Bot @PTUnofficialBot

    NYU Information for Practice puts out 400-500 good quality health-related research posts per week but its too much for many people, so that bot is limited to just subscribers. You can read it or subscribe at @PsychResearchBot

    Since 1991 The National Psychologist has focused on keeping practicing psychologists current with news, information and items of interest. Check them out for more free articles, resources, and subscription information: nationalpsychologist.com

    EMAIL DAILY DIGEST OF RSS FEEDS -- SUBSCRIBE: subscribe-article-digests.clin

    READ ONLINE: read-the-rss-mega-archive.clin

    It's primitive... but it works... mostly...

    -------------------------------------------------

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #depression #psychotherapist #SocialMediaMentalHealth #MentalHealthInterventions #OnlineTherapy #SocialSupportOnline #CBT #Mindfulness #DigitalHealth #StressReduction #AnxietyHelp #DepressionSupport

  3. DATE: May 13, 2026 at 08:00PM
    SOURCE: PSYPOST.ORG

    ** Research quality varies widely from fantastic to small exploratory studies. Please check research methods when conclusions are very important to you. **
    -------------------------------------------------

    TITLE: Study reveals the key ingredients for successful social media mental health interventions

    URL: psypost.org/study-reveals-the-

    A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials testing the effects of social-media-based mental health interventions found that they lead to moderate-high reductions in stress symptoms and low-moderate reductions in depression and anxiety symptom severity. The interventions were more effective when participants were more than 70% female, when the programs were human-guided, social-oriented, and when effects were compared to groups that received care as usual. The paper was published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.

    More than 1 in 8 adults and adolescents worldwide live with a mental disorder. The two most common types of mental health disorders are anxiety disorders and depression. However, estimates state that only a small fraction of individuals suffering from mental health disorders receive a treatment that results in the remission of symptoms. That is why scientists are looking for new ways to provide mental health treatments at scale to people who need them.

    One prospective type of treatment that can be delivered at scale are online mental health interventions, particularly interventions delivered through social-media-based programs. These interventions represent organized efforts to provide psychological support, education, coping skills, or behavior-change strategies through platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, Reddit, or other online communities.

    They include therapist-led groups, peer-support communities, psychoeducational posts, chat-based guidance, mood tracking, crisis resources, or structured activities based on approaches such as cognitive-behavioral therapy or mindfulness. These programs can make support more accessible because many people already use social media regularly and may find it easier to engage online than in traditional services. However, their quality, privacy protections, safety procedures, and effectiveness vary, with studies reporting inconsistent results about their effectiveness.

    Study author Qiyang Zhang and her colleagues wanted to integrate the findings of rigorously designed randomized controlled trials examining the effectiveness of social-media-based mental health interventions in reducing mental health symptoms. They were interested in the overall impact of these treatments on symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, negative affect, and psychological distress. These researchers also wanted to know how much these effects depend on the methodological specificities of studies and programs, such as program duration, program focus, or the control group the treatment was compared with.

    They conducted a meta-analysis. The first author of this study conducted a search of databases of published scientific reports that included the Education Resources Information Center, PsychINFO, Scopus, PsychArticles, Communication and Mass Media Complete, PubMed, and Proquest databases. She also searched for studies through Paperfetcher across journals in the field the study authors considered reputable, and examined the reference lists of the papers they found.

    Study authors looked for studies that reported results of randomized controlled trials with at least 30 participants per experimental condition. The intervention examined in the study needed to be delivered through social media platforms (e.g., Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and WeChat), and the difference in mental health symptoms between groups undergoing different treatments needed to be small at the start. Additionally, the interventions needed to be delivered by nonresearchers to better reflect how these programs would function in the real world.

    They also required the difference between the number of participants who did not finish the study (the attrition rate) in the compared treatment conditions to be less than 15%. In this way, they wanted to reduce the risk that the observed treatment differences were caused by different dropout rates. For example, if participants who benefited least, or those who experienced the strongest effects or adverse experiences, left one condition more often than the other, the remaining participants could become systematically different, biasing the results.

    In the end, after screening over 11,000 published studies, 17 studies met all the criteria the study authors defined. These studies reported the effects of 22 distinct intervention programs, comprising 5,624 total participants. Of these programs, 7 were conducted on adolescents, 7 on people in early adulthood, 7 included middle adulthood participants, while 1 study was of older individuals.

    Twelve studies had more than 70% female participants. In 9 studies, participants were recruited based on a specific clinical condition.

    Overall, the results showed that the examined studies had a low-moderate beneficial effect on mental health symptoms. The symptom reduction was the strongest for stress symptoms and it was moderate-high in size. Effects on reducing anxiety and depression symptoms were low-moderate.

    Further analyses found that the examined social-media-based interventions tended to be more effective when the studies were conducted on groups that were more than 70% female, when the programs were human-guided (i.e., guided by humans including therapists, coaches, or research assistants), social-oriented (i.e., programs that provide mainly social interaction, emotional support, or companionship), and when control groups were people who received care as usual (i.e., where control group participants received standard care as opposed to waitlist groups). Interestingly, the researchers found that a participant’s age did not significantly affect the outcomes of the intervention.

    “This meta-analysis synthesized the best evidence on this topic and found that, overall, high-quality social-media-based RCTs [randomized controlled trials] were effective in reducing depression, anxiety, stress, negative affect, and psychological distress. Given the benefits of scalability and cost-effectiveness of social-media-based approaches, mental health services should consider integrating online interventions into routine practice,” the study authors concluded.

    The study contributes to the scientific understanding of the mental health effects of social-media-based mental health interventions. However, the study authors note that the statistical power of their review was limited by the small sample size of available, high-quality studies. Furthermore, the reported effects are not generalizable to all social-media-based mental health interventions. In each case, the effects of a specific intervention depend on its particular characteristics and on its appropriateness for the mental health condition or difficulties that individuals undergoing the intervention are experiencing.

    The paper, “Social-Media-Based Mental Health Interventions: Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials,” was authored by Qiyang Zhang, Zixuan Huang, Yuan Sui, Fu-Hung Lin, Hongjie Guan, Li Li, Ke Wang, and Amanda Neitzel.

    URL: psypost.org/study-reveals-the-

    -------------------------------------------------

    DAILY EMAIL DIGEST: Email [email protected] -- no subject or message needed.

    Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

    Unofficial Psychology Today Xitter to toot feed at Psych Today Unofficial Bot @PTUnofficialBot

    NYU Information for Practice puts out 400-500 good quality health-related research posts per week but its too much for many people, so that bot is limited to just subscribers. You can read it or subscribe at @PsychResearchBot

    Since 1991 The National Psychologist has focused on keeping practicing psychologists current with news, information and items of interest. Check them out for more free articles, resources, and subscription information: nationalpsychologist.com

    EMAIL DAILY DIGEST OF RSS FEEDS -- SUBSCRIBE: subscribe-article-digests.clin

    READ ONLINE: read-the-rss-mega-archive.clin

    It's primitive... but it works... mostly...

    -------------------------------------------------

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #depression #psychotherapist #SocialMediaMentalHealth #MentalHealthInterventions #OnlineTherapy #SocialSupportOnline #CBT #Mindfulness #DigitalHealth #StressReduction #AnxietyHelp #DepressionSupport

  4. Accessible Support with Online Therapy Australia

    Online therapy in Australia connects clients to licensed professionals for personalised care. Whether managing stress, anxiety or personal challenges, these sessions make therapy easier to fit into busy lives.

    therapyconnect.com.au/

    #onlinetherapyaustralia #onlinetherapy #TherapyConnect

  5. 'Therapy Chatbot Tells Recovering Addict to Have a Little Meth as a Treat. "Pedro, it’s absolutely clear you need a small hit of meth to get through this week."'

    That's fine, isn't it?

    futurism.com/therapy-chatbot-a

    #ChatBots #OnlineTherapy

  6. 'Therapy Chatbot Tells Recovering Addict to Have a Little Meth as a Treat. "Pedro, it’s absolutely clear you need a small hit of meth to get through this week."'

    That's fine, isn't it?

    futurism.com/therapy-chatbot-a

    #ChatBots #OnlineTherapy

  7. 'Therapy Chatbot Tells Recovering Addict to Have a Little Meth as a Treat. "Pedro, it’s absolutely clear you need a small hit of meth to get through this week."'

    That's fine, isn't it?

    futurism.com/therapy-chatbot-a

    #ChatBots #OnlineTherapy

  8. 'Therapy Chatbot Tells Recovering Addict to Have a Little Meth as a Treat. "Pedro, it’s absolutely clear you need a small hit of meth to get through this week."'

    That's fine, isn't it?

    futurism.com/therapy-chatbot-a

    #ChatBots #OnlineTherapy

  9. 'Therapy Chatbot Tells Recovering Addict to Have a Little Meth as a Treat. "Pedro, it’s absolutely clear you need a small hit of meth to get through this week."'

    That's fine, isn't it?

    futurism.com/therapy-chatbot-a

    #ChatBots #OnlineTherapy

  10. Places Where You Can Seek #OnlineTherapy If You're Struggling With #MentalHealth Issues
    1. iCall
    2. YourDOST
    3. The Alternative Story
    4. ePsyclinic
    5. Manastha

  11. Places Where You Can Seek If You're Struggling With Issues
    1. iCall
    2. YourDOST
    3. The Alternative Story
    4. ePsyclinic
    5. Manastha

  12. Places Where You Can Seek #OnlineTherapy If You're Struggling With #MentalHealth Issues
    1. iCall
    2. YourDOST
    3. The Alternative Story
    4. ePsyclinic
    5. Manastha

  13. Places Where You Can Seek #OnlineTherapy If You're Struggling With #MentalHealth Issues
    1. iCall
    2. YourDOST
    3. The Alternative Story
    4. ePsyclinic
    5. Manastha

  14. Places Where You Can Seek #OnlineTherapy If You're Struggling With #MentalHealth Issues
    1. iCall
    2. YourDOST
    3. The Alternative Story
    4. ePsyclinic
    5. Manastha

  15. 🌿 Healing from Trauma with Online Holistic Therapy 🌿
    Trauma survivors are finding hope and relief through holistic therapy—right from the comfort of their homes. 💙 Discover how online holistic therapy is transforming lives by promoting emotional healing, mindfulness, and self-care. 🌸✨

    Read more: rimathejunglegirl.com/how-trau

    #HolisticHealing #TraumaRecovery #OnlineTherapy #EmotionalWellness #Mindfulness

  16. The program allows teens to sign up at talkspace.com/seattle, getting matched with a licensed provider in WA and having access to one video session per month! #OnlineTherapy #AccessibleCare

  17. The program allows teens to sign up at talkspace.com/seattle, getting matched with a licensed provider in WA and having access to one video session per month! #OnlineTherapy #AccessibleCare

  18. The program allows teens to sign up at talkspace.com/seattle, getting matched with a licensed provider in WA and having access to one video session per month! #OnlineTherapy #AccessibleCare

  19. The program allows teens to sign up at talkspace.com/seattle, getting matched with a licensed provider in WA and having access to one video session per month!

  20. The program allows teens to sign up at talkspace.com/seattle, getting matched with a licensed provider in WA and having access to one video session per month! #OnlineTherapy #AccessibleCare

  21. What Are the Benefits of Online Depression Therapy in Gurgaon?: Discover the benefits of online depression therapy in Gurgaon. Get expert support, privacy, and convenience with Lyfsmile’s trusted…

    Continue reading on Medium » medium.com/@silkeygoyal0/what- #MentalHealth #DepressionTherapy #OnlineTherapy #Gurgaon #MentalWellness

  22. What Are the Benefits of Online Depression Therapy in Gurgaon?: Discover the benefits of online depression therapy in Gurgaon. Get expert support, privacy, and convenience with Lyfsmile’s trusted…

    Continue reading on Medium » medium.com/@silkeygoyal0/what- #MentalHealth #DepressionTherapy #OnlineTherapy #Gurgaon #MentalWellness

  23. What Are the Benefits of Online Depression Therapy in Gurgaon?: Discover the benefits of online depression therapy in Gurgaon. Get expert support, privacy, and convenience with Lyfsmile’s trusted…

    Continue reading on Medium » medium.com/@silkeygoyal0/what- #MentalHealth #DepressionTherapy #OnlineTherapy #Gurgaon #MentalWellness

  24. We all are essential, complex and import to the whole!

    Remember, we are never alone, never isolated and never out of options!

    This is a therapy from humans to humans!
    mandalaazul.pt/en-gb

    #mandalaazul #fabiana_encarnacao #holistictherapy #onlinetherapy #spiritual #conscience

  25. Video games offer therapeutic potential, providing a space for mental health discussions, expression, and community support, though concerns about online therapy persist.

    https://froydinger.com/tom-nook-is-your-new-therapist-in-game-therapy-and-why-it-works/

  26. Why We Post • Those who post emotional diaries online (like I’ve been doing since the 90s!) may derive therapeutic benefit. Classic therapy cliche is that they don’t react but allow you to arrive at the realizations. The above Toots led to the attached post on FB and then some caring replies and my thoughts advanced further. Therapy! Myself! Online! (Please excuse the mess.)

    #onlinetherapy #therapy #diary #goodsocialmedia

  27. Why We Post • Those who post emotional diaries online (like I’ve been doing since the 90s!) may derive therapeutic benefit. Classic therapy cliche is that they don’t react but allow you to arrive at the realizations. The above Toots led to the attached post on FB and then some caring replies and my thoughts advanced further. Therapy! Myself! Online! (Please excuse the mess.)

    #onlinetherapy #therapy #diary #goodsocialmedia

  28. Why We Post • Those who post emotional diaries online (like I’ve been doing since the 90s!) may derive therapeutic benefit. Classic therapy cliche is that they don’t react but allow you to arrive at the realizations. The above Toots led to the attached post on FB and then some caring replies and my thoughts advanced further. Therapy! Myself! Online! (Please excuse the mess.)

    #onlinetherapy #therapy #diary #goodsocialmedia

  29. #introduction seems to be a thing... As do hashtags so here we go: I'm a #law lecturer at #WestminsterUni. Used to be a #barrister in #familylaw. More recently a #counsellor/ #psychotherapist and practice from #hackney #cityfarm as part of a #therapycollective, Holborn & #onlinetherapy. General #therapy & specialist therapy for #lawyers. #sociolegal/ #legalresearch & teaching on the #psychology of #legalpractice. More hastags #buddhism #buddhist #queer #lgbt #therapy #psychology #MentalHealth

  30. #introduction seems to be a thing... As do hashtags so here we go: I'm a #law lecturer at #WestminsterUni. Used to be a #barrister in #familylaw. More recently a #counsellor/ #psychotherapist and practice from #hackney #cityfarm as part of a #therapycollective, Holborn & #onlinetherapy. General #therapy & specialist therapy for #lawyers. #sociolegal/ #legalresearch & teaching on the #psychology of #legalpractice. More hastags #buddhism #buddhist #queer #lgbt #therapy #psychology #MentalHealth

  31. #introduction seems to be a thing... As do hashtags so here we go: I'm a #law lecturer at #WestminsterUni. Used to be a #barrister in #familylaw. More recently a #counsellor/ #psychotherapist and practice from #hackney #cityfarm as part of a #therapycollective, Holborn & #onlinetherapy. General #therapy & specialist therapy for #lawyers. #sociolegal/ #legalresearch & teaching on the #psychology of #legalpractice. More hastags #buddhism #buddhist #queer #lgbt #therapy #psychology #MentalHealth

  32. #introduction seems to be a thing... As do hashtags so here we go: I'm a #law lecturer at #WestminsterUni. Used to be a #barrister in #familylaw. More recently a #counsellor/ #psychotherapist and practice from #hackney #cityfarm as part of a #therapycollective, Holborn & #onlinetherapy. General #therapy & specialist therapy for #lawyers. #sociolegal/ #legalresearch & teaching on the #psychology of #legalpractice. More hastags #buddhism #buddhist #queer #lgbt #therapy #psychology #MentalHealth

  33. #introduction seems to be a thing... As do hashtags so here we go: I'm a #law lecturer at #WestminsterUni. Used to be a #barrister in #familylaw. More recently a #counsellor/ #psychotherapist and practice from #hackney #cityfarm as part of a #therapycollective, Holborn & #onlinetherapy. General #therapy & specialist therapy for #lawyers. #sociolegal/ #legalresearch & teaching on the #psychology of #legalpractice. More hastags #buddhism #buddhist #queer #lgbt #therapy #psychology #MentalHealth

  34. DotCom Therapy raises $13M to provide therapy for kids, in and out of school - DotCom Therapy, a pediatric teletherapy company, just closed a $13 million series ... - feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcr #onlinetherapy #education #tc

  35. Healios raises $10M to scale its mental health platform for children scarred by the COVID-19 pandemic - Heaven knows what will happen to the mental health of children who’ve gone through... - feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcr #artificialintelligence #nationalhealthservice #machinelearning #onlinetherapy #schizophrenia #unitedkingdom #mentalhealth #ukgovernment #healthcare #healthcare #services #europe #autism #health #chair #ceo #nhs #tc

  36. ifeel, another well-being platform that blends self-care tools with 1-2-1 therapy, scores $6.6M - If the pandemic has been good for anything it’s been good for the therapy business... - feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcr #fundings&exits #onlinetherapy #unitedkingdom #mentalhealth #nautacapital #mindfulness #meditation #insurance #self-care #therapist #germany #therapy #europe #health #brazil #france #israel #madrid #mexico #ifeel #italy #spain