One year after introducing acceleratorKHP on the Elevate stage as a bold catalyst for youth mental health innovation in Canada, Kids Help Phone (KHP) returned to announce a transformative shift in mental health support that seamlessly integrates human connection with the power of generative AI, setting a new benchmark for care in the digital age.
Youth in Canada are facing a mental health crisis. Since 2020, KHP has interacted with young people more than 22 million times. Over the past decade, the number of young people reporting good mental health has steadily declined. Today, suicide is the second leading cause of death among young people in Canada.
For over 36 years, KHP has been a trusted leader in youth mental health in Canada. No one understands the evolving needs of young people across the country quite like KHP, because the organization interacts with youth more than 4 million times annually.
To fulfill its promise of offering new pathways to help that are authentic and intuitive in young people’s worlds, KHP is building a new standard of care. Through acceleratorKHP, the organization is revolutionizing how youth mental health supports are designed and delivered—leveraging one of a kind coast to coast-to-coast clinical infrastructure, real-time de-identified and anonymized data, research, AI, and partnerships to ensure youth can access help whenever and wherever they need it most.
Developed through acceleratorKHP, KHP’s GenAI tool will offer a personalized experience built with and for young people—providing choice, flexibility, safety, and credibility.
At the heart of this innovation is KHP’s extraordinary data resource: over 50 million data points that have been aggregated and anonymized from conversations with youth. Rather than offering one-size-fits-all support, acceleratorKHP is unlocking new possibilities for personalization, accessibility, and relevance. The GenAI tool is being co-created with youth and is actively in prototyping—because that’s the only way to truly understand and meet their needs. By putting youth at the center and prioritizing safety from the start, KHP is building a tool that truly understands and protects those it’s meant to serve.
Blending human connection with KHP’s GenAI product in development, young people will experience a new standard of support—one that understands their unique words, feels intuitive from the beginning, and evolves with their needs.
The GenAI tool will be able to appropriately assess risk levels, whether it’s a minor concern, suicidal ideation, or suicidal action and initiate the right steps to keep the young person safe. A trained KHP clinical professional will always be available to respond, 24/7.
KHP’s work is possible because its models are trained on KHP’s one-of-a-kind, diverse data set, integrated with clinical frameworks and quality assurance processes that have made the organization a trusted space for youth for over three decades.
While the GenAI tool is still in early development, the vision is clear: to connect young people to the support they need, in the moments they need it most, and in ways that reflect the realities of their world today. Because to young people, help means everything.
Fast Facts
- 75% of service users tell KHP something they’ve never told anyone before
- Since the start of 2020, KHP has had more than 22 million interactions with service users across Canada
- Last year, 49 per cent of youth said that if they had not reached out to KHP, they would have ignored the issue or hoped it went away, which is a significant barrier to good mental health
To get involved with acceleratorKHP and follow KHP’s innovation journey, visit www.acceleratorkhp.ca
Hug Your Younger Self…. Trend Or Risk?
Posted in Commentary on October 9, 2025 by itnerdThere is a social media trend that is making the rounds called “hug your younger self.” A quick search engine search shows that there’s all sorts of websites that will generate photos of your older and younger self hugging. But all is not what it seems when it comes to these websites according to Dr. Michael Peirce, Chief Scientist of Daon, a leading provider of digital identity solutions that help businesses verify, authenticate, and secure customer identities through biometric and multi-factor authentication.
What risks are associated with uploading childhood and current photos to LLMs?
“The primary risk is the same as loading any other kind of personally identifiable information onto the Internet. You lose all control of your personal data, and how, where, and by whom it is used for all time. It’s very similar to the viral “Tell your friends about yourself by answering 40 questions” game that went around social media for years. While individuals both shared and participated in this innocently, it created a treasure trove of data for fraudsters to use to attack knowledge-based authentication. The same principle exists in this case. Once your image is available online, people with bad intentions can use it for whatever they choose. Add to that the fact that deepfake technology is at the point that a believable image or even video can be generated from a single image, and you have the makings of a significant threat. Once bad actors have a deepfake, it can be used for blackmail, reputational harm, and even to defeat lower quality biometric security.
Furthermore, depending on the terms of usage of the LLMs, photos of your face may be used to help train future LLMs and other AI algorithms. The images might even be sold to other interested parties. Your face or its similarity could even become part of images provided back to other users in response to their LLM prompts. This could include images that, through no intention of the user, closely resemble you appearing in commercial or other applications. Legal precedent for unintentional use of AI generated likeness is still being established.”
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