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EASE-Y Project: Promoting Mental Health and Wellbeing Among Vulnerable Young Adolescents

The EASE-Y project aims to improve the mental health of vulnerable early adolescents (those in unstable socio-economic conditions, in alternative care, migrants, refugees, children displaced from Ukraine, and Roma children). EASE-Y will implement the WHO’s evidence-based EASE intervention in Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, and Slovakia.

The EASE-Y project aims to contribute to the promotion of mental health (MH) and wellbeing, and to the prevention of MH disorders in particularly vulnerable early adolescents, such as children in precarious socio-economic living conditions and children in alternative care, and particularly migrants, refugees, children displaced from Ukraine, and Roma children. The action will be implemented in Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, and Slovakia.

To do so, it will pilot test the use of an evidence-based intervention for young adolescents, Early Adolescent Skills for Emotions (EASE), developed by WHO. EASE is a group-based brief psychological intervention that aims to improve the mental health of early adolescents aged 10 to 15 struggling with symptoms of mental health conditions such as anxiety and depression. Relying on a task-shifting approach, the intervention will equip lay helpers and carers with skills to identify and respond to the MH needs of vulnerable children.

Backed by a rigorous research action, the project will evaluate its effectiveness and provide implementation and policy recommendations for its further scale-up. Child-friendly psycho-education materials together with awareness raising and advocacy activities will increase early detection of MH complaints in early adolescents and access to MH care for them and their caregivers.

The project intends to train 14 EASE trainers in the EU and 46 EASE facilitators in the four countries, and to reach at least 720 vulnerable early adolescents and ±600 caregivers. The project builds on synergies between previously funded EU4H projects Well-U and U-RISE, which promote WHO-developed scalable MHPSS interventions.

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Clinical, Neuro- & Developmental Psychology

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These documents reflect only the authors’ views and the European Commission is not responsible for any use of the information they contain.

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Faculty of Behavioural and Human Movement Sciences (FGB)
Department of Clinical, Neuro- & Developmental Psychology
Van der Boechorststraat 7
1081 BT Amsterdam

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