TY - JOUR AU - M. Colizzi A1 - AB - Mental health is an escalating global health priority, yet prevention strategies remain underdeveloped and underutilized. This commentary outlines ten priorities to advance a modern, equitable, and effective approach to mental health prevention. It advocates expanding the At-Risk Mental State (ARMS) framework beyond psychosis to include other common mental disorders, and calls for routine, dynamic risk assessment, particularly targeting early-life adversities. A transdiagnostic approach is encouraged to better identify and respond to nuanced, dimensional early signs of psychological distress. Emphasizing a neurodevelopmental perspective, the commentary supports life-course interventions and improved continuity between child and adult mental health services. It urges to redesign mental health systems to enable early access and sustained youth engagement, particularly through multidisciplinary, integrated care models that encompass both mental health and addiction services. The commentary also highlights growing evidence of shared biological mechanisms, such as inflammation and metabolic dysregulation, linking mental and physical health, reinforcing the need for holistic prevention strategies. Finally, it underscores the necessity of societal and policy-level interventions to address structural determinants of mental illness, including inequality, environmental stressors, and youth marginalization. Together, these priorities present a proactive and collaborative vision of prevention that spans individual, community, and systemic levels. Achieving this vision requires a fundamental shift from reactive clinical care to preventive, intersectoral public health action. While ambitious, such a transformation is essential to reduce the global burden of mental illness and promote lifelong mental well-being. AD - Unit of Psychiatry and Eating Disorders, Department of Medicine (DMED), University of Udine, Udine, 33100, Italy. marco.colizzi@uniud.it.; Department of Psychosis Studies, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, SE5 8AF, UK. marco.colizzi@uniud.it. AN - 41026342 BT - Discov Ment Health C5 - Healthcare Disparities CP - 1 DA - Sep 30 DO - 10.1007/s44192-025-00290-7 DP - NLM ET - 20250930 IS - 1 JF - Discov Ment Health LA - eng N2 - Mental health is an escalating global health priority, yet prevention strategies remain underdeveloped and underutilized. This commentary outlines ten priorities to advance a modern, equitable, and effective approach to mental health prevention. It advocates expanding the At-Risk Mental State (ARMS) framework beyond psychosis to include other common mental disorders, and calls for routine, dynamic risk assessment, particularly targeting early-life adversities. A transdiagnostic approach is encouraged to better identify and respond to nuanced, dimensional early signs of psychological distress. Emphasizing a neurodevelopmental perspective, the commentary supports life-course interventions and improved continuity between child and adult mental health services. It urges to redesign mental health systems to enable early access and sustained youth engagement, particularly through multidisciplinary, integrated care models that encompass both mental health and addiction services. The commentary also highlights growing evidence of shared biological mechanisms, such as inflammation and metabolic dysregulation, linking mental and physical health, reinforcing the need for holistic prevention strategies. Finally, it underscores the necessity of societal and policy-level interventions to address structural determinants of mental illness, including inequality, environmental stressors, and youth marginalization. Together, these priorities present a proactive and collaborative vision of prevention that spans individual, community, and systemic levels. Achieving this vision requires a fundamental shift from reactive clinical care to preventive, intersectoral public health action. While ambitious, such a transformation is essential to reduce the global burden of mental illness and promote lifelong mental well-being. PY - 2025 SN - 2731-4383 SP - 140 ST - Ten priorities that are shaping the future of mental health prevention T1 - Ten priorities that are shaping the future of mental health prevention T2 - Discov Ment Health TI - Ten priorities that are shaping the future of mental health prevention U1 - Healthcare Disparities U3 - 10.1007/s44192-025-00290-7 VL - 5 VO - 2731-4383 Y1 - 2025 ER -