Published on in Vol 8, No 8 (2021): August

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/32475, first published .
Acceptability of Using Social Media Content in Mental Health Research: A Reflection. Comment on “Twitter Users’ Views on Mental Health Crisis Resolution Team Care Compared With Stakeholder Interviews and Focus Groups: Qualitative Analysis”

Acceptability of Using Social Media Content in Mental Health Research: A Reflection. Comment on “Twitter Users’ Views on Mental Health Crisis Resolution Team Care Compared With Stakeholder Interviews and Focus Groups: Qualitative Analysis”

Acceptability of Using Social Media Content in Mental Health Research: A Reflection. Comment on “Twitter Users’ Views on Mental Health Crisis Resolution Team Care Compared With Stakeholder Interviews and Focus Groups: Qualitative Analysis”

Journals

  1. Mason S, Singh L. Reporting and discoverability of “Tweets” quoted in published scholarship: current practice and ethical implications. Research Ethics 2022;18(2):93 View
  2. Schwarz J, Wolff J, Heinze M, von Peter S, Habicht J. How to measure staff continuity in intensive psychiatric home treatment: a routine data and single case analysis. Frontiers in Psychiatry 2023;14 View
  3. Jagfeld G, Lobban F, Humphreys C, Rayson P, Jones S. How People With a Bipolar Disorder Diagnosis Talk About Personal Recovery in Peer Online Support Forums: Corpus Framework Analysis Using the POETIC Framework. JMIR Medical Informatics 2023;11:e46544 View
  4. Cooms S, Leroy-Dyer S, Muurlink O. The rise of virtual yarning: An Indigenist research method. Qualitative Research 2024 View