TY - JOUR
T1 - Meeting of minds
T2 - Imagining the future of child and youth mental health research from an early career perspective
AU - Demkowicz, Ola
AU - Sprecher, Eva A
AU - Gomez Bergin, Aislinn D
AU - Marzetti, Hazel
AU - Petersen , Kimberly J
AU - Kara, Buket
AU - Sawrikar, Vilas
AU - White, Hannah J
AU - Parsonage-Harrison, Jackie
AU - Wolstencroft, Jeanne
AU - Reardon, Tessa
AU - March, Anna
AU - McIver, Leanne
AU - Jones, Hannah J
AU - Clarke, Tim
AU - Breedvelt, Josefien
AU - Chatburn, Eleanor
PY - 2025/3/24
Y1 - 2025/3/24
N2 - Child and youth mental health is an international public health and research priority. We are an interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral network of UK-based early career researchers (ECRs) with an interest in child and youth mental health research. In this paper, we reflect on ongoing challenges and areas for growth, offering recommendations for key stakeholders in our field including researchers, institutions, and funders. We present a vision from an ECR perspective of what child and youth mental health research could look like moving forward and we explore how the research infrastructure can support ECRs and the wider research field in making this vision a reality. We focus specifically on a) embracing complexity; b) centering diverse voices; and c) facilitating sustainable research environments and funding systems. We present recommendations for all key partners to consider alongside their local contexts and communities to actively and collaboratively drive progress and transformative change.
AB - Child and youth mental health is an international public health and research priority. We are an interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral network of UK-based early career researchers (ECRs) with an interest in child and youth mental health research. In this paper, we reflect on ongoing challenges and areas for growth, offering recommendations for key stakeholders in our field including researchers, institutions, and funders. We present a vision from an ECR perspective of what child and youth mental health research could look like moving forward and we explore how the research infrastructure can support ECRs and the wider research field in making this vision a reality. We focus specifically on a) embracing complexity; b) centering diverse voices; and c) facilitating sustainable research environments and funding systems. We present recommendations for all key partners to consider alongside their local contexts and communities to actively and collaboratively drive progress and transformative change.
UR - https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/bjpsych-bulletin
M3 - Comment/debate
SN - 2056-4694
JO - BJPsych Bulletin
JF - BJPsych Bulletin
ER -