University of Leeds: SAMA
Promoting adolescent mental health in India
The challenge
SAMA is a project to support research, understanding and policy around the mental health of India's youth. It is estimated that 1 in 5 school-going adolescents in India live with anxiety, stress or depression. More than half of mental health conditions arise during adolescence, and many persist into adulthood, affecting around 150 million adults in India. Without action, the incidence of mental health disorders in the country is set to rise and support resources are already stretched.
Launched in January 2021, the SAMA project is led jointly by the University of Leeds and the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bangalore. The team were embarking on the first phase of a three-year project to help young people understand and manage their own mental health, to educate teachers about adolescent mental health, improve the school environment and reduce mental health stigma, and to help parents better support the young person they care for.
The project team at the University of Leeds briefed ThreeTenSeven (formerly Thompson) to create a new brand and a website that would act as an HQ for the project, providing a central platform for all stakeholders – young people, teachers, parents, mental health NGOs and policy makers. It would be a place for them to find information, resources and get the latest news on the project's progress. It would also be an opportunity to give voice to the young people who are the focus of the SAMA project.
Our approach
The process started with a thorough strategic review to understand the issues and attitudes across user groups and identify what they would need from SAMA as a resource.
At the centre of the solution is an identity scheme, featuring a new logo which highlights the key function of the SAMA project – to open up the conversation about young people's mental health. To appeal to full breadth of their audiences, we provided them with a suite of visual assets – graphics and illustrations – that could be easily applied across the site and be used for other applications such as print, if required. The ThreeTenSeven team developed a bespoke illustration style that could grow over time too, providing ownable assets and allowing us to create content that was culturally appropriate for both the UK and Indian audiences.
A website was needed too. Thompson provided expert UX and design input, creating an intuitive digital experience that can easily grow over the three years of the project as a body of research is produced by the team. Our UX input helped to make sense of the vast amount of planned content and make it accessible to a wide range of users.