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循证方法在全球精神卫生数据库设计中吸引年轻人参与的应用。

An Application of Evidence-Based Approaches to Engage Young People in the Design of a Global Mental Health Databank.

机构信息

Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

Population Mental Health Unit, Centre for Mental Health and Community Wellbeing, School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.

出版信息

Health Expect. 2024 Oct;27(5):e14172. doi: 10.1111/hex.14172.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Engaging youth in mental health research and intervention design has the potential to improve their relevance and effectiveness. Frameworks like Roger Hart's ladder of participation, Shier's pathways to participation and Lundy's voice and influence model aim to balance power between youth and adults. Hart's Ladder, specifically, is underutilized in global mental health research, presenting new opportunities to examine power dynamics across various contexts. Drawing on Hart's ladder, our study examined youth engagement in mental health research across high- and middle-income countries using Internet-based technologies, evaluating youth involvement in decision-making and presenting research stages that illustrate these engagements.

METHODS

We conducted a directed content analysis of youth engagement in the study using primary data from project documents, weekly AirTable updates and discussions and interviews with youth and the research consortium. Using Hart's Ladder as a framework, we describe youth engagement along rungs throughout different research stages: cross-cutting research process, onboarding, formative research and quantitative and qualitative study designs.

RESULTS

Youth engagement in the MindKind study fluctuated between Rung 4 ('Assign, but informed') and Rung 7 ('Youth initiated and directed') on Hart's Ladder. Engagement was minimal in the early project stages as project structures and goals were defined, with some youth feeling that their experiences were underutilized and many decisions being adult-led. Communication challenges and structural constraints, like tight timelines and limited budget, hindered youth engagement in highest ladder rungs. Despite these obstacles, youth engagement increased, particularly in developing recruitment strategies and in shaping data governance models and the qualitative study design. Youth helped refine research tools and protocols, resulting in moderate to substantial engagement in the later research stages.

CONCLUSION

Our findings emphasize the value of youth-adult partnerships, which offer promise in amplifying voices and nurturing skills, leadership and inclusiveness of young people. Youth engagement in project decision-making progressed from lower to higher rungs on Hart's Ladder over time; however, this was not linear. Effective youth engagement requires dynamic strategies, transparent communication and mutual respect, shaping outcomes that authentically reflect diverse perspectives and mental health experiences.

PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION

There was substantial patient and public involvement in this study. This paper reports findings on youth engagement conducted with 35 young people from India, South Africa and the United Kingdom, all of whom had lived experience of mental health challenges. Youth engagement in the MindKind study was coordinated and led by three professional youth advisors (PYAs) in these contexts, who were also young people with lived experience of mental health challenges. Each of the three study sites embedded a full-time, community-based PYA within their study team to inform all aspects of the research project, including the development of informational materials and the facilitation of Young People's Advisory Group (YPAG) sessions referenced in this paper. Each PYA also consulted with a site-specific YPAG that met bi-monthly throughout the project, shaping the formation of study materials and serving as a test group in both the quantitative and qualitative studies. Youth participants in this study also contributed extensively, engaging in data collection and manuscript writing. The following youth advisory panels members (J.B., L.B., D.O.J., M.V.) and all PYAs (E.B., S.R., R.S.) in the MindKind study contributed to the writing of this manuscript and are acknowledged as co-authors.

摘要

简介

让年轻人参与心理健康研究和干预设计有可能提高研究的相关性和有效性。罗杰·哈特(Roger Hart)的参与阶梯、希耶(Shier)的参与途径和伦迪(Lundy)的声音和影响力模型等框架旨在平衡年轻人和成年人之间的权力。哈特的阶梯在全球心理健康研究中未得到充分利用,为在不同背景下检验权力动态提供了新的机会。本研究借鉴哈特的阶梯,使用基于互联网的技术,考察了高收入和中等收入国家的年轻人在心理健康研究中的参与度,评估了年轻人在决策中的参与度,并展示了说明这些参与度的研究阶段。

方法

我们对使用项目文件、每周 AirTable 更新以及与年轻人和研究联盟的讨论和访谈中的主要数据进行了指导内容分析,以研究年轻人的参与情况。我们使用哈特的阶梯作为框架,描述了在不同研究阶段沿着阶梯的年轻人参与情况:贯穿研究过程、入职、形成性研究以及定量和定性研究设计。

结果

MindKind 研究中的年轻人参与在哈特的阶梯的 4 级(“分配,但知情”)和 7 级(“年轻人发起和指导”)之间波动。在项目结构和目标定义的早期项目阶段,参与度较低,一些年轻人觉得自己的经验没有得到充分利用,许多决策都是由成年人主导的。沟通挑战和结构限制,如紧张的时间表和有限的预算,阻碍了年轻人在最高梯级的参与。尽管存在这些障碍,但年轻人的参与度有所增加,特别是在制定招聘策略以及塑造数据治理模型和定性研究设计方面。年轻人帮助完善了研究工具和协议,从而在后期研究阶段实现了中等至高程度的参与。

结论

我们的研究结果强调了青年-成人伙伴关系的价值,这为增强年轻人的声音和培养他们的技能、领导力以及包容性提供了希望。随着时间的推移,年轻人在项目决策中的参与度从较低的阶梯上升到较高的阶梯;然而,这并不是线性的。有效的年轻人参与需要动态策略、透明沟通和相互尊重,从而塑造真实反映不同观点和心理健康体验的结果。

患者或公众贡献

本研究有大量的患者和公众参与。本文报告了在印度、南非和英国进行的一项涉及 35 名年轻人的研究中的青年参与情况,他们都有心理健康挑战的经历。MindKind 研究中的青年参与由三位专业青年顾问(PYAs)在这些环境中协调和领导,他们也是有心理健康挑战经历的年轻人。每个研究地点都在其研究团队中嵌入了一名全职、社区为基础的 PYA,负责告知研究项目的各个方面,包括信息材料的开发和本文所述的年轻人咨询小组(YPAG)会议的促进。每个 PYA 还与项目所在地的特定 YPAG 进行了咨询,该 YPAG 在整个项目期间每两个月举行一次会议,塑造了研究材料的形成,并作为定量和定性研究的测试组。参与本研究的年轻人也广泛参与了数据收集和手稿撰写。以下是 MindKind 研究中的青年咨询小组成员(J.B.、L.B.、D.O.J.、M.V.)和所有 PYA(E.B.、S.R.、R.S.)在本研究中都为本文的撰写做出了贡献,并被承认为共同作者。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/3594/11380080/b0594a2fe763/HEX-27-e14172-g001.jpg

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