In February 2025, Youth-GEMs participated in the European Commission policy event “Research & Innovation to promote mental health and prevent or treat mental disorders”, held in Brussels. The event brought together researchers, policymakers, and stakeholders from across Europe to reflect on how EU-funded research can be translated into concrete and scalable practices that improve mental health outcomes across the lifespan.
The discussions from this event were later consolidated into the European Commission policy report “Translating research results into promising practices for better mental health”, published by the Directorate-General for Research & Innovation in 2025. We are extremely proud to have contributed to this collective effort, particularly within the thematic area focusing on understanding mental disorders to strengthen prevention and early intervention!
About the policy report
The policy report builds on insights from 19 EU-funded research and innovation projects and is structured around six interconnected thematic areas, including the mental health of children and young people, psychosocial risks, digital tools, participatory approaches, and prevention-oriented innovation. Going beyond the event programme, the report synthesises policy-relevant lessons, shared challenges, and future directions to support decision-making at European, national, and regional levels.
Across all themes, the report emphasises the need to move beyond narrow diagnostic categories and to adopt a more integrated understanding of mental health. This includes considering biological, psychological, social, and environmental determinants, strengthening prevention and early identification strategies, ensuring meaningful involvement of end users, and supporting the translation of research evidence into real-world impact.
Youth-GEMs contribution
Youth-GEMs is featured in the report under Session 6: Understanding mental disorders for better prevention and treatment, alongside other two Horizon Europe projects addressing the biological and environmental drivers of mental health. Our project is highlighted as an example of a multidomain and transdiagnostic approach to youth mental health—meaning an approach that looks across multiple factors and symptoms rather than focusing on single diagnoses.
Specifically, the report recognises Youth-GEMs’ work on developing multidomain assessment protocols for young people experiencing mental distress, integrating clinical, environmental, genetic, and digital data, and advancing AI-informed tools to support early identification and monitoring. By focusing on mental health trajectories over time, Youth-GEMs contributes to a shift towards understanding risk and resilience mechanisms during adolescence and young adulthood.
These contributions closely reflect the broader priorities highlighted in the policy report. In particular, the report reinforces the importance of prevention and early intervention, participatory and youth-centred research approaches, and the responsible and ethical use of digital and AI-based tools—areas where Youth-GEMs is actively contributing through its research and innovation activities.
As Bart Rutten, Coordinator of Youth-GEMs, explains:
“This report shows that understanding mental health in young people means looking beyond single diagnoses and recognising the complex interaction between biology, environment, and lived experience. Youth-GEMs is proud to contribute to a European effort that places prevention, early intervention, and scientific evidence at the centre of future mental health care and related policies.”
What’s next?
The publication of this policy report marks an important milestone in strengthening the link between research, innovation, and European mental health policy. Youth-GEMs will continue driving its mission forward and work alongside young people, researchers, and policymakers to ensure that its findings support meaningful and sustainable real-world impact.
📄 Read the full policy report: Translating research results into promising practices for better mental health – Publications Office of the EU