Towards a new model of population mental health research and policy translation in the UK : establishing a National Consortium
Oswald, Tassia Kate and Barker, Joseph and Barrett, Daniel and Blackburn, Ruth and Breuer, Erica and Chilman, Natasha and Cutler, Natasha and Daly, Helen and Doherty, Niamh and Doumany, Abd and Downs, Johnny and Dregan, Alexandru and Dutta, Rina and Dyer, Jacqueline and Fischer, Laura and Hatch, Stephani L. and Hernandez, Sumaty and Hotopf, Matthew and Jeffery, Annie and John, Ann and Kirkbride, James B. and Knifton, Lee and Koksal, Caglar and Leavey, Gerard and Oparah, Ngozi and Ouro-Gnao, Isaac and Marzano, Lisa and Patterson, Paul and Rhead, Rebecca and Schofield, Peter and Sidhu, Kalwant and Steeg, Sarah and Stevelink, Sharon and Sutton, Matt and Webb, Roger T. and Woodman, Jenny and Das-Munshi, Jayati (2026) Towards a new model of population mental health research and policy translation in the UK : establishing a National Consortium. International Journal of Mental Health Systems. ISSN 1752-4458 (https://doi.org/10.1186/s13033-026-00703-2)
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Abstract
Background Mental health conditions account for 18% of years lived with disability worldwide. 1-in-6 adults are affected in England, with most mental health conditions beginning in childhood and adolescence. Mental distress and ill health are unequally distributed in the UK, with strong associations with wider determinants of health, and higher prevalence among systemically disadvantaged groups. Currently, there is a lack of evidence to inform effective and timely policymaking for primary prevention in the UK. Methods In recognition of these challenges, a national Population Mental Health (PMH) Consortium was established, as part of Population Health Improvement UK (PHIUK). PHIUK is a national research network which works to transform health and reduce inequalities through change at the population level. Our aim is to establish an interdisciplinary PMH Consortium, focussing on upstream determinants and the prevention of risks and onset of mental health conditions through interdisciplinary stakeholder engagement, to create new opportunities for population-based improvement of mental health in the UK.The PMH Consortium brings together leading interdisciplinary representation in population mental health, spanning from sciences to the arts, across the UK. Membership includes six academic institutions, third sector organisations, lived experience expertise, and strong links with national bodies to ensure integrated cross-national and regional policy impact. The PMH Consortium comprises four cross-cutting platforms (Partners in policy, implementation, and lived experience; Data, linkages, and causal inference; Narrowing inequalities; Training and capacity building) and three challenge areas (Children and young people’s mental health; Prevention of suicide and self-harm; Multiple long-term conditions) which are highly integrated and interdependent. The work will be underpinned by a Theory of Change across an initial four-year life cycle. Conclusion This paper describes the aim, objectives, and approach of the PMH Consortium, as well as anticipated challenges and strengths. The goal of the PMH Consortium is to develop a model for population mental health research and policy translation that is both scalable and sustainable. It is critical to ensure continued impact and viability beyond the initial four years, contributing to the prevention of mental health conditions in the UK, with personal, economic, social, and health benefits.
ORCID iDs
Oswald, Tassia Kate, Barker, Joseph, Barrett, Daniel, Blackburn, Ruth, Breuer, Erica, Chilman, Natasha, Cutler, Natasha, Daly, Helen, Doherty, Niamh, Doumany, Abd, Downs, Johnny, Dregan, Alexandru, Dutta, Rina, Dyer, Jacqueline, Fischer, Laura, Hatch, Stephani L., Hernandez, Sumaty, Hotopf, Matthew, Jeffery, Annie, John, Ann, Kirkbride, James B., Knifton, Lee
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2227-7305, Koksal, Caglar, Leavey, Gerard, Oparah, Ngozi, Ouro-Gnao, Isaac, Marzano, Lisa, Patterson, Paul, Rhead, Rebecca, Schofield, Peter, Sidhu, Kalwant, Steeg, Sarah, Stevelink, Sharon, Sutton, Matt, Webb, Roger T., Woodman, Jenny and Das-Munshi, Jayati;
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Item type: Article ID code: 96277 Dates: DateEvent2 May 2026Published2 May 2026Published Online17 March 2026AcceptedSubjects: Medicine > Public aspects of medicine Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Social Work and Social Policy
Strategic Research Themes > Society and PolicyDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 15 May 2026 13:38 Last modified: 02 Jun 2026 07:10 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/96277
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