A prize designed to spotlight impact
Wellcome, in partnership with Nature, has announced the Wellcome Prize for Mental Health Science with Nature. The prize will award US$1 million to a winning team whose work shows clear, measurable improvements in mental health outcomes. Three further finalists will each receive US$250,000. The winner will be announced next year.
What makes this prize different is its focus. It is not about polished, late stage products or headline grabbing technologies. Instead, it aims to recognise early stage, evidence based interventions that already demonstrate real benefit and have the potential to be adopted more widely.
Eligible entries could include new treatments, digital tools, school or workplace programmes, policy changes or community led models of care. What matters most is not the category, but the outcome. The judges are looking for clear evidence that people’s lives are improving as a result.
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Why visibility matters
Mental health has a long history of stigma and neglect. As the Nature editorial notes, many past approaches to mental illness were shaped more by social control than by care or compassion. People with serious mental health conditions were often feared, excluded or subjected to harmful practices, leaving a legacy that still affects attitudes and investment today.
Prizes cannot fix these deep rooted problems on their own. But they can help change the story we tell about mental health research. By drawing public attention to credible, high quality science, a prize of this scale sends a powerful message. Mental health research is rigorous. It is innovative. And it can lead to real, meaningful change.
