Addressing Global Environmental Challenges to Mental Health Using Population Neuroscience: A Review.
Publication year
2023Author(s)
Source
JAMA Psychiatry, 80, 10, (2023), pp. 1066-1074ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Cognitive Neuroscience
PI Group Statistical Imaging Neuroscience
Journal title
JAMA Psychiatry
Volume
vol. 80
Issue
iss. 10
Page start
p. 1066
Page end
p. 1074
Subject
220 Statistical Imaging Neuroscience; Radboudumc 7: Neurodevelopmental disorders DCMN: Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience; Cognitive Neuroscience - Radboud University Medical CenterAbstract
IMPORTANCE: Climate change, pollution, urbanization, socioeconomic inequality, and psychosocial effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have caused massive changes in environmental conditions that affect brain health during the life span, both on a population level as well as on the level of the individual. How these environmental factors influence the brain, behavior, and mental illness is not well known. OBSERVATIONS: A research strategy enabling population neuroscience to contribute to identify brain mechanisms underlying environment-related mental illness by leveraging innovative enrichment tools for data federation, geospatial observation, climate and pollution measures, digital health, and novel data integration techniques is described. This strategy can inform innovative treatments that target causal cognitive and molecular mechanisms of mental illness related to the environment. An example is presented of the environMENTAL Project that is leveraging federated cohort data of over 1.5 million European citizens and patients enriched with deep phenotyping data from large-scale behavioral neuroimaging cohorts to identify brain mechanisms related to environmental adversity underlying symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, and substance misuse. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This research will lead to the development of objective biomarkers and evidence-based interventions that will significantly improve outcomes of environment-related mental illness.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [243110]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3971]
- Electronic publications [129793]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92415]
- Open Access publications [104346]
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