Fast Company February 11, 2020
Mark Wilson

If you’re facing depression, anxiety, or anorexia, Snapchat wants to be there to help.

Facebook, Twitter, and even YouTube have made their stance relatively clear: Use these platforms at your own risk. They’re not the truth police, and whether or not other people harass you is up to you to handle. Of course we know where this has gotten us. We now have everything from a hacked election to a range of mental health issues among social media users to show for it.

Last year, Pinterest drew a line in the sand, banning anti-vaxx content and directing people to information from the World Health Organization when searching for harmful misinformation. Now Snap is taking...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Apps, Digital Health, Mental Health, Patient / Consumer, Provider, Technology
A Winery Addresses Mental Health
Predictions for AI in mental health in the coming year
Being Touched Often Might Help Improve Mental Health
A 'universal human right': Quality mental healthcare for children
‘We Look at the Hospital as the Failure Point’: Innovive CEO on Bringing Behavioral, Physical Health Integration into the Home

Share This Article