The Mental Health Coalition

Mental health represents a vital element of individual and collective well-being.  It can be put at risk by stressful or adverse living, working or economic conditions, and social inequalities, violence and conflict: in this regard, the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated how vulnerable mental health can be. Mental health conditions are highly prevalent and represent one of the leading causes of suffering and disability in the European Region.

The challenges posed by mental health conditions touch all ages and social groups.  They include a surge of diseases of despair, the persistent prevalence of depressive and anxiety disorders among young people, the growth of self-harm and suicide, and the unmet needs of people with dementia or autism spectrum disorder. Specific challenges are the rise of burnout among health workers; the need to confront the mental health fallout of the COVID-19 crisis; and the need to support the resilience of communities affected by conflict.

In many cases, the suffering of individuals and their families is compounded by stigma, discrimination and violation of human rights, and social exclusion, making the way in which society looks at people with mental health conditions a part of the problem itself.

The Mental Health Coalition will convene high-profile, committed personalities and influential stakeholders like the affected people themselves, under the auspices of  Her Majesty Queen Mathilde of Belgium, to transform societal attitudes about  mental health.

The Coalition will work to eliminate stigma and discrimination by increasing mental health literacy, also among the health workforce. It will mobilize commitments for investment in mental health and advocate for the service reforms that can bring mental health care in all Member States up to 21st-century standards, in line with European values. The Coalition will help to change the way in which societies in the European Region look at mental health, and it will also help countries to improve how their  health services work with individuals and communities to better their mental health.

The Coalition will:

  • provide an overarching structure for exchanging experience and mobilizing national champions, advocates and service innovators;
  • serve as the umbrella for a multi-agency, Region-wide review of lessons learnt and future perspectives for mental health policy formation and implementation;
  • stimulate fundamental and applied research on mental health, with particular attention to the interface between health, social and community care and  the role of primary care; the intersection between mental health and gender;  and the role of temporary or chronic financial insecurity;
  • facilitate national policy dialogues on mental health and psychosocial support  to incorporate key mental health priorities in national policies and plans  (such as cross-sector prevention; digitalization of mental health services;  de-institutionalization of psychiatric care and investment in commensurate community structures; collaboration between health and social care networks;  and forensic mental health).