Digital mental health and employment - Lessons from the Australian experience

  1. Sebastian Rosenberg 1
  2. Luis Salvador-Carulla 2
  3. Sue Lukersmith 2
  4. Nasser Bagheri 2
  1. 1 University of Canberra Health Research. University of Canberra. Australia/ Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney. Camperdown. Australia
  2. 2 University of Canberra Health Research. University of Canberra. Australia
Revista:
European journal of psychiatry

ISSN: 0213-6163

Año de publicación: 2023

Volumen: 37

Número: 1

Páginas: 36-43

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.1016/J.EJPSY.2022.08.001 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAcceso abierto editor

Otras publicaciones en: European journal of psychiatry

Resumen

Background and objectives This paper reviews Australia's take-up of digital mental health interventions, including some specific reference to their application in relation to employment. Use of these interventions in Australia was already significant. Under COVID-19 they have exploded. The Australian experience offers useful lessons for European and other countries, and these are summarised. Methods This paper presents a narrative review of key texts, resources, policies and reports, from government and other sources. It also presents data reflecting the take-up of digital mental health services and the employment of people with a mental illness in Australia. Results We present data showing the explosion in uptake of digital mental health services. There is very limited evidence about the impact of these services in improving employment outcomes for people with a mental illness in Australia. The Government has moved to make them a permanent feature of mental health care, in addition to traditional face-to-face care. Conclusion Key lessons emerge from the Australian experience, including the need for target clarity; the importance of blending digital services into broader frameworks of mental health care; the need for quality and safety standards to be developed and applied to digital services; and the need for better evaluation of the outcomes of digital interventions in the workplace. The digital mental health genie is out of the bottle. New capacity for evaluation of the outcomes of digital mental health services is vital to ensure value and quality of such investments.