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Apply the latest research to strengthen mental wellbeing and prevent stress-related disorders in your communities.
Chief Editor: Nadine Wilches, LCSW
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Scaling Mental Health Success: A Proactive, System-Wide Approach
The global burden of mental illness is both widespread and costly. In the United States, more than 18% of adults and over 20% of children experience a serious mental disorder each year, and globally, more than 450 million people are affected (NAMI, 2021). The economic toll is equally significant, with lost productivity and healthcare costs in the U.S. alone exceeding $280 billion annually (Abramson, 2024; APA, 2023). In response, major philanthropic investments have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into research on conditions such as depression, anxiety, and schizophrenia (Brain & Behavior Research Foundation, 2025). Yet the dominant model remains reactive, focused on crisis care and treatment after illness appears. While essential, this approach is costly and insufficient. A more sustainable path requires shifting the system toward primary prevention by viewing mental well-being as something to actively build and protect at the population level (psychological health promotion), not just treat once it declines.
Preventing Teen Dating Violence: A Comprehensive Proactive Population Health Framework
The traditional landscape of public health and behavioral health has long been defined by its responsiveness to crisis. When an adolescent experiences physical or sexual harm within a dating relationship, the machinery of the social service and healthcare sectors activates to provide triage, treatment, and recovery. While these services are indispensable for those already harmed, they represent the final stage of a systemic failure to intervene before the onset of violence. Teen dating violence (TDV), a significant public health issue affecting millions of young people annually, is an adverse childhood experience (ACE) with lifelong implications for health, economic opportunity, and overall wellbeing (Basile et al., 2020). To address this challenge, a fundamental shift is required: emphasizing resources not just on reactive, deficit-based models but on proactive, preventive, and systemic approaches grounded in population health informatics and the principles of positive psychology (Wilches, 2022).
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