Early adolescence is a key stage for mental health. Young people in Eastern Europe are currently facing particular challenges, as they are confronted by poverty and inequality on the one hand, and are often adversely affected by the ongoing conflict in Ukraine on the other. In a project funded by EU HORIZON EUROPE, researchers are developing tools to promote the mental health of adolescents, specifically in Eastern Europe, in a manner that is both affordable and scalable.
“Around half of mental health problems emerge in early adolescence,” as Heather Foran, Professor of Health Psychology at the Department of Psychology at the University of Klagenfurt, explains. Early adolescence is a key period for health because it is a time of vast physical, emotional, and social changes and a distinct phase of brain development. Family relationships and the role of legal guardians are crucial, as “educational approaches that provide security and autonomy are associated with healthy behaviours in children and adolescents. Children who grow up in a nurturing environment with ample opportunity to develop independence tend to enjoy better sleeping patterns, follow a healthier diet, engage in more physical activity and suffer less from anxiety and depression,” Foran goes on to say. The promotion of mental health, including within the family context, is clearly an important public health objective.
Heather Foran continues: “Support programmes are often expensive because they require the use of highly qualified staff and involve substantial licensing costs. These programmes are not as widely available as they need to be to address the global burden in child and adolescent mental health and violence prevention” The aim of the current Horizon Europe is to systematically evaluate from an implementation science framework how to meet the demand with regard to health promotion for adolescents and to prevent violence in low- or middle-income countries.
The question arises, however, as to the extent to which these aims – focusing particularly on Eastern Europe – are being met, and what adjustments remain to be made. This is the key research question that a consortium of international researchers, led by Heather Foran, will be addressing over the next four years as part of the project FLOURISH (Family-focused adolescent & lifelong health promotion). She specifies: “Our aim is to optimise and evaluate the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and implementation at scale of Parenting for Lifelong Health for Teens and the Helping Adolescent Thrive programme.”
To this end, the programme will first be adapted to reflect current and culturally relevant challenges. In a next step, a comprehensive study will examine which package is most impactful and cost-effective. Subsequently, the optimised programme will be tested. Finally, the programme will be disseminated more widely by involving professionals and policy-makers.
The project was launched at the start of 2023 and will run until the end of 2026. Further information is available at FLOURISH – Contact (flourish-study.org).
In the picture: Heather Foran.
Photocredit: © Walter Elsner.