FIND SUPPORT WEBSITE
In the U.S., 3 in 10 people face challenges with mental health, substance use, or alcohol. Many commercial websites offer reliable mental health and substance use information but are often designed to promote products or services deceptively. High-quality mental health information is sometimes available on nonprofit websites, but their design is often terrible on mobile. Our project aimed to create an excellent website experience with high-quality information on mental health and substance use. We used the Stages of Change Model (a.k.a. Transtheoretical Model) to help users progress from contemplation to preparation for behavior change
During this 9-month project, I planned and led all user research, conducting six rounds of studies with participants across the U.S. We began with interviews and concluded with usability testing of a high-fidelity mobile prototype.
Role
Research Lead
DESIGNER
To reach a diverse audience, we visited remote locations like Morehead, Minnesota, and urban centers like downtown Los Angeles. To ensure inclusivity, we prioritized reaching underrepresented groups, including LGBTQI+ individuals, Native tribes, people with mental health challenges, and the disability community. Given the challenge of achieving full diversity within a single research round of 6–10 participants, we focused on engaging a broad range of people across all rounds. Additionally, we prioritized including Medicaid users in every round of research since
Actions on this project
Research planning
Research Operations
ConducTINg 6 Rounds of Research
UX design recommendations
RESEARCH Reporting
Results
A noncommercial, mobile-friendly website written in plain language based on the public’s needs
~ 500K visitors to the website in 2024
Trained other team members in usability testing and interview techniques
Instructed and supported other team members in using trauma-informed research practices