Mental health conditions affect 84 million people in the EU, costing 4% of GDP and accounting for 26% of Europe’s disease burden—figures worsened by COVID-19 and driven by socio-economic inequalities, climate distress, workplace digitalization, migration stress, and aging. Despite this, mental health care in Europe relies heavily on specialized clinical treatments, which face major challenges: a shortage of specialists, limited access, and inadequate support for marginalized populations. Clinical approaches also fail to address broader risk factors. To meet rising needs, Europe must rethink its approach and scale up cost-effective mental health promotion and prevention strategies in everyday settings, addressing stigma and systemic risks—especially for high-risk populations.
ADVANCE aims to develop, evaluate, and scale mental health promotion and prevention strategies using a social justice and human rights approach. Its three objectives are:
Document challenges and co-create scaling strategies, anticipating emerging risks, improving access, and reducing stigma.
Evaluate interventions, assessing both new approaches for novel populations and optimal implementation of existing evidence-based programs.
Support large-scale implementation of these strategies.
The project spans six countries, targeting diverse populations:
1. Lithuania (WP2) – Socio-economically disadvantaged youth through WHO’s STARS (Sija).
2. Germany (WP2) – Youth experiencing climate distress via EMICompass (CliMACT).
3. Netherlands (WP3) – Workers in digitalized workplaces using WHO’s DWM and ASCEND.
4. Italy (WP4) – Migrants facing stress, supported by WHO’s SH+ and online DWM.
5. Denmark (WP4) – Migrants aided through WHO’s SH+ in social integration programs.
6. Switzerland (WP5) – Older adults at risk of cognitive decline through a Cognitive Training Program and adapted SH+.
Through these initiatives, ADVANCE seeks to transform mental health interventions across Europe.