6533b7ddfe1ef96bd1274731

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The need for a behavioural science focus in research on mental health and mental disorders

Thomas GoschkeHeleen RiperGuy ChouinardWinfried RiefFilip RaesSaskia Van Der OordSaskia Van Der OordStefan G. HofmannClaudio CsillagRicardo ArayaCarmen BerrocalPer BechSusanne KnappeEliana TossaniRosa María Baños RiveraPim CujipersGunter SchumannHans-ulrich WittchenTom BeckersTom BeckersMichael BarkhamCecilia A. EssauBram VervlietFrancesc ColomPer CarlbringThomas H. OllendickPeter MurisDaniel DavidPaul M. G. EmmelkampMatthias BerkingGiovanni A. FavaDirk HermansWolfgang LutzThomas BergerCristina BotellaGerhard AnderssonGerhard AnderssonJosep Maria Haro

subject

education.field_of_studyPsychotherapistmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationPsychological interventionBehavioural sciencesDiseaseMental health3. Good healthPsychology of sciencePsychiatry and Mental healthConceptual frameworkPsychologyeducationDiversity (politics)media_common

description

Psychology as a science offers an enormous diversity of theories, principles, and methodological approaches to understand mental health, abnormal functions and behaviours and mental disorders. A selected overview of the scope, current topics as well as strength and gaps in Psychological Science may help to depict the advances needed to inform future research agendas specifically on mental health and mental disorders. From an integrative psychological perspective, most maladaptive health behaviours and mental disorders can be conceptualized as the result of developmental dysfunctions of psychological functions and processes as well as neurobiological and genetic processes that interact with the environment. The paper presents and discusses an integrative translational model, linking basic and experimental research with clinical research as well as population-based prospective-longitudinal studies. This model provides a conceptual framework to identify how individual vulnerabilities interact with environment over time, and promote critical behaviours that might act as proximal risk factors for ill-health and mental disorders. Within the models framework, such improved knowledge is also expected to better delineate targeted preventive and therapeutic interventions that prevent further escalation in early stages before the full disorder and further complications thereof develop. In contrast to conventional "personalized medicine" that typically targets individual (genetic) variation of patients who already have developed a disease to improve medical treatment, the proposed framework model, linked to a concerted funding programme of the "Science of Behaviour Change", carries the promise of improved diagnosis, treatment and prevention of health-risk behaviour constellations as well as mental disorders.

https://doi.org/10.1002/mpr.1409