Goodday Sarah Margaret, Rivera Daniel, Foran Hannah, King Nathan, Milanovic Melissa, Keown-Stoneman Charles Dg, Horrocks Julie, Tetzlaff Elizabeth, Bowie Christopher R, Pickett William, Harkness Kate, Saunders Kate E, Cunningham Simone, McNevin Steven, Duffy Anne
Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Queens University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2019 Aug 26;9(8):e029854. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-029854.
Over 30% of Canadians between the ages of 16 and 24 years attend university. This period of life coincides with the onset of common mental illnesses. Yet, data to inform university-based mental health prevention and early intervention initiatives are limited. The U-Flourish longitudinal study based out of Queen's University, Canada and involving Oxford University in the UK, is a student informed study funded by the Canadian Institute for Health Research Strategy for Patient Oriented Research (CIHR-SPOR). The primary goal of U-Flourish research is to examine the contribution of risk and resiliency factors to outcomes of well-being and academic success in first year students transitioning to university.
The study is a longitudinal survey of all first-year undergraduate students entering Queen's University in the fall term of 2018 (and will launch at Oxford University in fall of 2019). In accordance with the CIHR-SPOR definitions, students represent the target population (ie, patient equivalent). Student peer health educators were recruited to inform the design, content and implementation of the study. Baseline surveys of Queen's first year students were completed in the fall of 2018, and follow-up surveys at the end of first year in the spring of 2019. Extensive student-led engagement campaigns were used to maximise participation rates. The baseline survey included measures of personal factors, family factors, environmental factors, psychological and emotional health, and lifestyle factors. Main outcomes include self-reported indicators of mental health at follow-up and mental health service access, as well as objective measures of academic success through linkage to university administrative and academic databases. A combination of mixed effects regression techniques will be employed to determine associations between baseline predictive factors and mental health and academic outcomes.
Ethical approval was obtained by the Health Sciences and Affiliated Teaching Hospitals Research Ethics Board (HSREB) (#6023126) at Queen's University. Findings will be disseminated through international and national peer-reviewed scientific articles and other channels including student-driven support and advocacy groups, newsletters and social media.
16至24岁的加拿大人中有超过30%进入大学。这一人生阶段恰逢常见精神疾病的发病期。然而,用于为基于大学的心理健康预防和早期干预举措提供信息的数据有限。“U-Flourish”纵向研究由加拿大女王大学开展,并与英国牛津大学合作,是一项由加拿大卫生研究院患者导向研究战略(CIHR-SPOR)资助的学生参与研究。“U-Flourish”研究的主要目标是考察风险因素和复原力因素对刚进入大学的一年级学生的幸福感和学业成就结果的影响。
该研究是对2018年秋季进入女王大学的所有本科一年级学生进行的纵向调查(并将于2019年秋季在牛津大学启动)。根据CIHR-SPOR的定义,学生代表目标人群(即等同于患者)。招募了学生同伴健康教育者来为研究的设计、内容和实施提供信息。女王大学一年级学生的基线调查于2018年秋季完成,并于2019年春季一年级结束时进行随访调查。开展了广泛的由学生主导的参与活动以提高参与率。基线调查包括个人因素、家庭因素、环境因素、心理和情绪健康以及生活方式因素的测量。主要结果包括随访时自我报告的心理健康指标和心理健康服务的使用情况,以及通过与大学行政和学术数据库链接得出的学业成就的客观测量结果。将采用混合效应回归技术组合来确定基线预测因素与心理健康和学业结果之间的关联。
该研究获得了女王大学健康科学与附属教学医院研究伦理委员会(HSREB)(#6023126)的伦理批准。研究结果将通过国际和国内同行评审的科学文章以及其他渠道传播,包括学生驱动的支持和倡导团体、时事通讯和社交媒体。