7 februari 2020
People who live in the city are relatively often confronted with psychological problems and conditions such as depression, anxiety and addiction. Certain individuals and groups in the city are more vulnerable to this than others. In the interdisciplinary doctoral research projects that will take place at the Centre, special attention will be paid to those vulnerable groups.
Lotte Brinkhof, for example, will look at developing preventive interventions aimed at raising the mental and physical resilience of vulnerable senior citizens. Amber Koert, on the other hand, will be focusing on young people. Adolescents living in demanding, urban, social media-dominated environments often report high levels of stress. Koert will investigate how exercise training can help mitigate against stress, depression and anxiety. Junus van der Wal will examine how the city increases the risk of depression. He will focus on, among others, ethnic minority groups and the socio-economically disadvantaged, two groups that are particularly vulnerable to depression.
Recruitment is ongoing for the eighth project, titled Understanding and Targeting Microbial Patterns among Adolescents with Depression: Using a Complex Systems Approach in an Urban Environment.
Each project will last four years. The projects are equally distributed across the three faculties involved in the Centre for Urban Mental Health: the Faculties of Science, Social & Behavioural Sciences, and Medicine. The candidates will be based at the Centre for Urban Mental Health, the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) and the faculties related to their specific project.