
Advancing the Science of Anxiety
Overview
For people who live with anxiety, the experience is often persistent, deeply distressing, and disruptive to everyday life. Despite its prevalence and societal impact, anxiety remains one of the least understood mental health conditions. For researchers and clinicians, it can be challenging to trace symptoms back to the biological processes that cause them. Those processes span levels of complexity from molecular interactions to social behavior, and understanding them requires diverse fields of study, including computational modeling, genetics, and behavioral neuroscience. A deeper, more integrated understanding of these mechanistic layers is essential to drive the next generation of diagnostics, therapeutics, and preventive strategies for anxiety.
The Milken Institute's Science Philanthropy Accelerator for Research and Collaboration (SPARC) has partnered with the Dauten Family Foundation to catalyze scientific discovery across the full spectrum of anxiety research. This initiative will map the existing knowledge of anxiety’s underlying biological mechanisms, identify key stakeholders in the anxiety research ecosystem, pinpoint barriers to progress, and, finally, identify opportunities for high-impact philanthropic investment into multidisciplinary anxiety research.
The SPARC team’s expertise in science philanthropy will inform a strategic roadmap to accelerate progress in anxiety science by fostering collaborative efforts that connect laboratory work to real-world impact. Through this initiative, SPARC aims to reshape our understanding of anxiety at its roots, paving the way for more effective, personalized, and biology-driven approaches to care.
Advancing the Science of Anxiety
Related Articles
Thriving Beyond Service: Strategic Philanthropy for the Military-to-Civilian Transition
For many veterans and their families, the transition from military service to civilian life—the military-to-civilian transition (MCT)—can present practical, logistical, and emotional challenges that affect their ability to thrive post...Read ReportGiving Smarter: Philanthropic Opportunities to Advance Bipolar Disorder Research
People of all ages, ethnicities, and backgrounds endure the intense shifts in mood and energy levels bipolar disorder (BD) causes. Severe, repeated manic and depressive episodes can strain relationships, make it difficult to hold a job, and...Read ReportPhilanthropic Opportunities for Well-Being in Higher Education
Fear, anxiety and social isolation brought on by the pandemic has exacerbated existing mental health challenges for people on college campuses, and created new ones as online learning expands, key rites of passage are cancelled, and social...Read ReportL
Philanthropic Action for America’s Mental Health System
Long before COVID-19 became a pandemic, America’s mental health system was failing to meet the needs of people requiring care. Today, more than 1 in 3 Americans report signs of clinical anxiety and depression—and in part because of the...Read ReportSupporting Wellness: Initial Findings from a Survey of Lived Experience and Research Priorities of Depression and Bipolar
In 2018, the Milken Institute Center for Strategic Philanthropy and the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance collaborated to develop a first of its kind community survey. The goal was to learn about the experiences of people living with...Read Report