Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Mental Health
Date Submitted: Feb 2, 2025
Date Accepted: Nov 22, 2025
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
The Stanford Brainstorm Social Media Safety Plan: A Proposal
ABSTRACT
We propose the Stanford Social Media Safety Plan as a user-friendly, collaborative, and effective tool to mitigate the imminent dangers and risks to mental health that are associated with social media use by children, adolescents, and young adults. This tool is informed and inspired by suicide safety plans as part of suicide safety planning (SSP), which have long shaped the standard of care for psychiatric discharges from inpatient units, emergency rooms, and comprehensive psychiatric emergency programs (CPEPs), as well as longitudinal outpatient care following occurrences of suicidal ideation or suicide attempts. In many systems including those of the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) where we first encountered them early in the course of our clinical training, they constitute an absolute requirement prior to discharge of the patient. Our social media safety plan is to be used proactively, in times of normalcy as well as crisis. While parental controls for digital devices and online platforms, official legal age requirements for online accounts, and individual parenting approaches abound, there is a dearth of practical tools that youth, families, schools, and communities can use to shape and alter social media use parameters, rules, and habits. Furthermore, providers in psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, and mental health at large are often confronted with behaviors and issues related to social media use during already time and resource-limited appointments, providing a massive opportunity for interventions that are harm reduction-oriented and easy to disseminate. While it has not yet been studied in a clinical trial, we have piloted its use with patients and families, worked on revisions and potential distinct versions of it, and presented it to larger audiences at mental health and technology conferences over the past year. The responses and feedback we have received, as well as reported anecdotal experiences with using it, have been overwhelmingly positive. An already unfolding child and adolescent mental health epidemic in the US has been aggravated and deepened partly by way of easy access to social media (and digital-screen time) with inadequate safeguards and monitoring in place. Social media’s impacts and related interventions require a multitiered biopsychosocial and cultural approach: at the level of the individual child, the family, the school, the state, the market, and the nation. At the level of youth and their parents or caregivers, practical tools are desperately needed. We propose the Stanford Brainstorm Social Media Safety Plan as one such significant tool.
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