PRESS RELEASE Important New Research Demonstrates Impact of Early Intervention on Youth Mental Health

Jigsaw is proud to share new findings from one of the largest studies to date on youth mental health service outcomes in Ireland, published in the Journal of Early Intervention in Psychiatry. The study provides compelling evidence that young people accessing Jigsaw services experience significant improvements in their mental health. These findings highlight the positive impacts experienced by young people attending Jigsaw services across Ireland and underscore the clinical staff ability to deliver tailored, meaningful therapy. This study also adds to the growing body of international evidence supporting the effectiveness of early intervention primary care youth mental health.

Key findings include:

  • Improvement Rates: Between 57% and 66% of young people showed reliable improvements in their mental health—outcomes that compare favourably with international standards and underline the effectiveness of timely mental health support. Most young people presented with moderate-to-moderate severe distress.
  • Timely Access: Delays exceeding 60 days reduced improvement rates by 11% among 12-16-year-olds, underscoring the urgent need for rapid access to care.
  • Supporting Those Most in Need: Young people experiencing the highest distress levels achieved the greatest improvements, highlighting the essential role Jigsaw plays in supporting those facing significant mental health challenges.
  • Personalised Care: More sessions did not always lead to better outcomes, reinforcing the importance of personalised, tailored therapeutic support based on individual needs.

What does this mean for Policy and Practice?

  • Invest in Early Intervention: Providing timely, high-quality mental health care not only leads to positive outcomes for young people but also helps reduce long-term societal and economic costs by addressing mental health issues early.
  • Focus on Personalised Support: Prioritise interventions tailored to individual needs, particularly for those experiencing greater distress, who are most likely to benefit significantly from targeted care.
  • Ensure Timely Access: Quick access to care is crucial. Providers should aim to keep wait times below 60 days, especially for 12–16-year-olds, to prevent delays from significantly impacting recovery.

“This study adds to the growing international evidence that early intervention works—especially when it’s timely, youth-focused, and tailored. The outcomes we’re seeing here in Ireland show just how impactful this approach can be when delivered at scale”.

“Jigsaw’s investment in a national electronic health record has been critical to building a data-driven culture—allowing us to generate real-time insights, track outcomes at scale, and continuously improve how we support young people’s mental health.”

Read the full study here: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/eip.13637

RESPONSE: Investing in early intervention supports for young people is essential – JIGSAW

Jigsaw welcome the statement issued today (February 5th, 2025) on the need for reform of mental healthcare in Ireland from John Farrelly, Chief Executive of the Mental Health Commission IRL, the regulator for mental health services in Ireland.

Commenting this morning in the Journal, Mr Farrelly calls on the government to move away from ‘short-term fixes’ and focus on building a ‘modern and accessible community mental health services that will become our first port of call if we are unwell’.

Dr Joseph Duffy, CEO of Jigsaw, responded:

“The comments from Mr Farrelly are timely and important as we start a national debate on how to support young people as a country. Sadly, the youth mental health crisis we are experiencing in Ireland today is a significant and growing issue. We must act now. Doing more of the same is no longer good enough. 

“Our current approach to mental healthcare in Ireland is not preventing preventable illness. We are allowing the number of more serious illness to grow and young people to fall through the gaps.

“Imagine if we treated heart disease the same way we treat youth mental health. Instead of encouraging healthy habits, regular check-ups, and early intervention, we’d wait until someone had a full-blown heart attack before offering treatment.

“We don’t wait for a heart attack to take heart health seriously—so why wait for a crisis to take youth mental health seriously?”

“We need more community mental health services for young people struggling with anxiety, depression, or stress, so we can reduce the number of lifelong mental health conditions, costly hospitalizations, and personal suffering. Early intervention when someone is suffering is key. ”