From Early Intervention to Youth Mental Health: lessons from UK
Invited Guest Lecture
Presented by:
Prof Swaran SINGH (Professor of Social and Community Psychiatry, Warwick Medical School - Health Sciences, University of Warwick)
Chaired by:
Professor CHAN Kit Wa, Sherry
Date:
20 January 2025
Time:
5:30 am
-
6:30 am
Venue:
Room 211 A&B, 2/F, New Clinical Building, Queen Mary Hospital
Abstract:
It is a paradox that while youth generally represents the peak of future life potential, it is also the period of maximum vulnerability to mental ill-health. About 75% of adult mental disorders emerge before 24 years of age, 50% emerging before the age of 16, often with severe long-term consequences. Poor mental health has a significant social and economic impact, while good mental health means that an individual can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively, and can make a fruitful contribution to both the economy and society. Young people who experience good mental health do better in education and have better career prospects and life outcomes. In contrast young people with poor mental health place high demands on education, social care and healthcare systems with adverse consequences that persist into adult life. The well-documented benefits of early intervention in psychosis services have led to major philosophical and conceptual shift in our understanding of interventions in a way that demands radical reform of services to meet the needs of our young people. This lecture will summarise the state of the art on the early intervention paradigm, describe evidence-based reform of mental health services in UK and beyond, and argue for the imperative of focussing on youth mental health in emerging economies with their large youth population and potential demographic dividend on offer.
Registration Link: https://hku.zoom.us/meeting/register/TAn5je7MTVi7xeLUIOQPgg
Deadline for registration is 20 January 2025 at noon.

