Background <p>Youth mental health systems worldwide face increasing demand, workforce shortages, and fragmented pathways to care. Addressing these challenges requires approaches that extend beyond specialist clinical treatment to incorporate prevention, participation, education, and recovery-oriented support. While Recovery Colleges are increasingly established within adult mental health services, their youth-adapted counterparts commonly referred to as Discovery Colleges remain underexplored within youth mental health systems research. This narrative review synthesises emerging literature to examine the conceptual foundations, developmental adaptations, and potential system-level role of Discovery Colleges within youth mental health care.</p> Methods <p>A narrative review approach was employed to synthesise emerging literature on Discovery Colleges and related recovery-oriented educational initiatives. Peer-reviewed publications, programme descriptions, and implementation reports were analysed to examine the defining principles, developmental relevance, organisational characteristics, and system-level implications of Discovery Colleges within youth mental health contexts.</p> Results <p>The synthesis identified four interrelated conceptual domains characterising Discovery Colleges: (1) recovery-oriented learning models and developmental adaptation; (2) mechanisms of engagement and participation; (3) organisational and professional implications; and (4) cross-sector positioning within youth mental health ecosystems. The findings suggest that Discovery Colleges can be conceptualised as developmentally responsive and recovery-oriented learning environments operating at the intersection of education, community support, and mental health care. The review further highlights important tensions relating to implementation, safeguarding, fidelity, sustainability, and cross-sector integration.</p> Conclusions <p>Discovery Colleges may represent a promising recovery-oriented innovation within youth mental health systems by reframing mental health support as a collaborative, participatory, and educational process rather than solely a clinical intervention. However, the current evidence base remains limited and largely exploratory. Further empirical, developmental, and implementation-focused research is required to evaluate their effectiveness, sustainability, and long-term contribution to integrated youth mental health systems.</p> <p></p>

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Discovery colleges in youth mental health systems: developmentally adapted recovery-oriented learning environments

  • Jared Omundo,
  • Manuel Föcker,
  • Simon Alexander Stiehl,
  • Shiblu Miah,
  • Michael Schulz,
  • Orkan Okan

摘要

Background

Youth mental health systems worldwide face increasing demand, workforce shortages, and fragmented pathways to care. Addressing these challenges requires approaches that extend beyond specialist clinical treatment to incorporate prevention, participation, education, and recovery-oriented support. While Recovery Colleges are increasingly established within adult mental health services, their youth-adapted counterparts commonly referred to as Discovery Colleges remain underexplored within youth mental health systems research. This narrative review synthesises emerging literature to examine the conceptual foundations, developmental adaptations, and potential system-level role of Discovery Colleges within youth mental health care.

Methods

A narrative review approach was employed to synthesise emerging literature on Discovery Colleges and related recovery-oriented educational initiatives. Peer-reviewed publications, programme descriptions, and implementation reports were analysed to examine the defining principles, developmental relevance, organisational characteristics, and system-level implications of Discovery Colleges within youth mental health contexts.

Results

The synthesis identified four interrelated conceptual domains characterising Discovery Colleges: (1) recovery-oriented learning models and developmental adaptation; (2) mechanisms of engagement and participation; (3) organisational and professional implications; and (4) cross-sector positioning within youth mental health ecosystems. The findings suggest that Discovery Colleges can be conceptualised as developmentally responsive and recovery-oriented learning environments operating at the intersection of education, community support, and mental health care. The review further highlights important tensions relating to implementation, safeguarding, fidelity, sustainability, and cross-sector integration.

Conclusions

Discovery Colleges may represent a promising recovery-oriented innovation within youth mental health systems by reframing mental health support as a collaborative, participatory, and educational process rather than solely a clinical intervention. However, the current evidence base remains limited and largely exploratory. Further empirical, developmental, and implementation-focused research is required to evaluate their effectiveness, sustainability, and long-term contribution to integrated youth mental health systems.