| Literature DB >> 32226481 |
Marco Colizzi1,2, Antonio Lasalvia1, Mirella Ruggeri1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Similar to other health care sectors, mental health has moved towards the secondary prevention, with the effort to detect and treat mental disorders as early as possible. However, converging evidence sheds new light on the potential of primary preventive and promotion strategies for mental health of young people. We aimed to reappraise such evidence.Entities:
Keywords: Early intervention; Multidisciplinary care; Prevention; Promotion; Trans-diagnostic model; Youth mental health
Year: 2020 PMID: 32226481 PMCID: PMC7092613 DOI: 10.1186/s13033-020-00356-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst ISSN: 1752-4458
Fig. 1A trans-diagnostic clinical staging model to intercept a wider clinical high-risk mental state population
Fig. 2Summary of risk factors and pluripotent pathological trajectory for mental disorders
Promotion and preventive strategies in youth mental health
| Identified key target areas | Areas for further improvement and future objectives | |
|---|---|---|
| Promotion | Promotion-prevention continuum | Address entire community |
| Nutrition and health care | Integrated and multidisciplinary actions | |
| Housing and homelessness | Healthcare-community collaborations | |
| Child abuse | ||
| Negative consequences of parents’ divorce | ||
| Family support | ||
| Education and school-related problematic behavior | ||
| Addictive substance use/dependence | ||
| Personal skill development/management of stressful life events | ||
| Primary prevention | Life-span continuum (Early stage-intensification of risk continuum) | |
| Universal | Brain development and anti-inflammatory neuroprotection (Phosphatidylcholine and | Pathophysiological mechanisms during early development |
| Neuroinflammation, oxidative stress, and microbiota dysbiosis (Omega-3 fatty acid, vitamin, sulforaphane, and prebiotic supplementation) | ||
| Bullying and peer rejection (School-based behavioral interventions) | ||
| Substance abuse | ||
| Brain plasticity, structure, connectivity, and cognitive functioning (Lifetime exercise training) | ||
| Selective | Parental mental illness | Poor validity of boundaries between diagnostic categories |
| Paternal age | Lack of evidence-based selective interventions | |
| Maternal and obstetric complications of pregnancy | Youth with family history of severe mental illness (genetic risk) | |
| Season of birth | ||
| Ethnic minority | ||
| Immigration status | ||
| Urban environment | ||
| Infections | ||
| Childhood adversities, socio-financial disadvantage, maladaptive behavior (Nursing home visits, school-based interventions, home teaching) | ||
| Vitamin D deficiency and malnutrition | ||
| Low premorbid intelligence quotient | ||
| Traumatic brain injury | ||
| Heavy tobacco and cannabis use | ||
| Indicated | Psychosis-risk state | Limited psychosis detection rate |
| Service engagement and liaison with secondary intervention services | Pluripotent and trans-diagnostic risk state | |
| Duration of untreated illness | Multi-component symptom intervention | |
| Control of symptoms and self-control of emotion and behavior (Cognitive behavioral, relaxation, mindfulness, and meditation strategies) | ||
| Poor social problem solving and low quality of social support (Social skill training) | ||
| Interpersonal conflict (Interpersonal psychotherapy, forgiveness programs) | ||
| Loneliness and social difficulties in general (Resilience training) | ||
| Secondary prevention | Collaborative care | Primary care-specialist mental health care collaborations |
| Recovery | ||
| Duration of untreated illness | ||
| Poor treatment response/treatment resistance | ||
| Poor psycho-social well-being and functioning | ||
| Comorbid substance use | ||
| Burden on families | ||
| Tertiary prevention | Recovery | Disease progression |
| Poor treatment response/treatment resistance | Interventions to prevent multiple relapses | |
| Poor psycho-social well-being and functioning | ||
| Comorbid substance use | ||
| Burden on families |
Fig. 3Vertical and horizontal integration of the enhanced model of primary care for mental health