Maintenance Notice

Due to necessary scheduled maintenance, the JMIR Publications website will be unavailable from Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EST. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause you.

Who will be affected?

Currently submitted to: JMIR Mental Health

Date Submitted: Jan 19, 2026
Open Peer Review Period: Feb 6, 2026 - Apr 3, 2026
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

NOTE: This is an unreviewed Preprint

Warning: This is a unreviewed preprint (What is a preprint?). Readers are warned that the document has not been peer-reviewed by expert/patient reviewers or an academic editor, may contain misleading claims, and is likely to undergo changes before final publication, if accepted, or may have been rejected/withdrawn (a note "no longer under consideration" will appear above).

Peer review me: Readers with interest and expertise are encouraged to sign up as peer-reviewer, if the paper is within an open peer-review period (in this case, a "Peer Review Me" button to sign up as reviewer is displayed above). All preprints currently open for review are listed here. Outside of the formal open peer-review period we encourage you to tweet about the preprint.

Citation: Please cite this preprint only for review purposes or for grant applications and CVs (if you are the author).

Final version: If our system detects a final peer-reviewed "version of record" (VoR) published in any journal, a link to that VoR will appear below. Readers are then encourage to cite the VoR instead of this preprint.

Settings: If you are the author, you can login and change the preprint display settings, but the preprint URL/DOI is supposed to be stable and citable, so it should not be removed once posted.

Submit: To post your own preprint, simply submit to any JMIR journal, and choose the appropriate settings to expose your submitted version as preprint.

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited.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.

Co-Production Without Youth? Closing the Participation Gap in Digital Mental Health Research

  • Charlotte Blease; 
  • Maria Tibbs; 
  • Andreas Balaskas; 
  • Shaun Liverpool; 
  • Josefin Hagström; 
  • Amanda Fitzgerald

ABSTRACT

Young people are among the fastest adopters of digital and AI-enabled mental health tools, yet they remain marginal to the research and design processes that shape these technologies. This Viewpoint examines a persistent participation gap in digital youth mental health research (DYMH): while co-production and patient and public involvement (PPI) are widely invoked as best practice, youth involvement is frequently superficial, inconsistent, or confined to late-stage consultation. As a result, digital mental health innovations risk misalignment with young people’s lived realities, priorities, and vulnerabilities. We identify three interrelated drivers of this gap. First, conceptual and linguistic fragmentation obscures what “participation” entails in practice, with terms such as co-design, co-production, user-centred design, and PPI used interchangeably despite reflecting different assumptions about power, influence, and decision-making. Second, participation is often uneven across the research lifecycle, with young people involved in ideation or usability testing but excluded from problem formulation, theory selection, implementation, and evaluation. Third, institutional barriers - including ethics review processes, consent requirements, funding constraints, and adult-centric research norms - systematically limit meaningful youth partnership. We argue that closing the participation gap is both an ethical imperative and a practical necessity. As digital and generative AI tools increasingly shape how young people understand and manage mental health, youth must be recognised as legitimate co-producers of knowledge rather than passive end users. We call for clearer reporting of participatory models, greater attention to youth influence across the research lifecycle, and structural support to normalise meaningful youth involvement. Without such shifts, DYMH innovation risks being scalable but not safe, credible, or trustworthy.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Blease C, Tibbs M, Balaskas A, Liverpool S, Hagström J, Fitzgerald A

Co-Production Without Youth? Closing the Participation Gap in Digital Mental Health Research

JMIR Preprints. 19/01/2026:91739

DOI: 10.2196/preprints.91739

URL: https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/91739

Download PDF


Request queued. Please wait while the file is being generated. It may take some time.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.