Gonzalez M R, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Linares D E, Wonnum S, Bagot K, White E J, Cuan A, DiMatteo S, Akiel Y D, Lindsley P, Harris J C, Perez-Amparan E, Powell T D, Latino de City Heights Colch Comité Organizador, Dowling G, Alkire D, Thompson W K, Murray T M
The Ohio State University OSU - (MRG), USA.
University of Southern California (CCI, YDA), USA.
Dev Cogn Neurosci. 2025 Jan;71:101497. doi: 10.1016/j.dcn.2024.101497. Epub 2024 Dec 18.
The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study is the largest longitudinal study on brain development and adolescent health in the United States. The study includes a sociodemographically diverse cohort of nearly 12,000 youth born 2005-2009, with an open science model of making data rapidly available to the scientific community. The ABCD Study® data has been used in over 1100 peer-reviewed publications since its first data release in 2018. The dataset contains a broad scope and comprehensive set of measures of youths' behavioral, health, and brain outcomes, as well as extensive contextual and environmental measures that map onto the social determinants of health (SDOH). Understanding the impact of SDOH on the developmental trajectories of youth will help to address early lifecourse health inequities that lead to disparities later in life. However, the open science model and extensive use of ABCD data highlight the need for guidance on appropriate, responsible, and equitable use of the data.
Our conceptual framework integrates the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) Research Framework with strength-based and data equity perspectives. We use this framework to articulate best practices and methods for investigations that aim to identify the multilevel pathways by which structural and systemic inequities impact adolescent health trajectories.
Using our conceptual model, we provide recommendations for equitable health disparities research using ABCD Study data. We identify over fifty ABCD measures that can encompass SDOH across five levels of influence: individual, interpersonal, school, community, and societal. We expand the societal level to acknowledge structural discrimination as the root cause of systemic and structural inequities resulting in health disparities among marginalized youth. We apply the methodological recommendations in an example data analysis using a multi-level approach that integrates strength-based and data equity perspectives to elucidate pathways by which social and structural inequities may influence cognitive decision making in youth. We conclude with recommendations for strengthening the utility of ABCD data for health disparities research now and in the future.
Adolescence is a critical period of development with subsequent ramifications for health outcomes across the lifespan. Thus, understanding SDOH among diverse youth can inform prevention interventions before the emergence of health disparities in adulthood.
青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究是美国规模最大的关于大脑发育和青少年健康的纵向研究。该研究纳入了一个社会人口统计学特征多样的队列,近12000名于2005年至2009年出生的青少年,并采用开放科学模式,使数据能迅速提供给科学界。自2018年首次发布数据以来,ABCD研究®数据已被用于1100多篇同行评审的出版物中。该数据集包含了广泛且全面的一系列青少年行为、健康和大脑结果的测量指标,以及大量与健康的社会决定因素(SDOH)相关的背景和环境测量指标。了解SDOH对青少年发展轨迹的影响,将有助于解决导致后期生活差异的早期生命历程健康不平等问题。然而,开放科学模式以及ABCD数据的广泛使用凸显了对数据进行适当、负责和公平使用的指导的必要性。
我们的概念框架将美国国立少数族裔健康与健康差异研究所(NIMHD)的研究框架与基于优势和数据公平的观点相结合。我们使用这个框架来阐述旨在确定结构和系统性不平等影响青少年健康轨迹的多层次途径的调查的最佳实践和方法。
利用我们的概念模型,我们为使用ABCD研究数据进行公平的健康差异研究提供建议。我们确定了五十多项ABCD测量指标,这些指标可以涵盖五个影响层面的SDOH:个人、人际、学校、社区和社会层面。我们扩展了社会层面,以承认结构性歧视是导致边缘化青少年健康差异的系统性和结构性不平等的根本原因。我们在一个示例数据分析中应用这些方法学建议,采用一种综合了基于优势和数据公平观点的多层次方法,以阐明社会和结构不平等可能影响青少年认知决策的途径。我们最后提出了关于加强ABCD数据在当前和未来健康差异研究中的效用的建议。
青春期是一个关键的发育时期,对整个生命周期的健康结果有后续影响。因此,了解不同青少年中的SDOH可以为成年期出现健康差异之前的预防干预提供信息。