多系统弹性及其对青少年心理健康的影响:对共同设计一项多学科、参与性研究的反思。

Frontiers in child and adolescent psychiatry Pub Date : 2025-03-18 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frcha.2025.1489950
Linda Theron, Matteo Bergamini, Cassey Chambers, Karmel Choi, Olufunmilayo I Fawole, Fyneface Dumnamene Fyneface, Jan Höltge, Thandi Kapwata, Diane T Levine, Zainab Mai Bornu, Makananelo Makape, Celeste Matross, Brian McGrath, Olanrewaju Olaniyan, Dov J Stekel, Josh Vande Hey, Caradee Y Wright, Ameh Abba Zion, Michael Ungar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

青少年抑郁症是一个全球性的紧急情况。解决这一紧急情况需要对与年轻人无/有限抑郁与严重抑郁经历相关的多系统风险以及生物、心理、社会、经济和环境资源有一个复杂的理解。然而,个人风险和对个人层面的保护资源的关注往往主导了对年轻人抑郁轨迹的描述。此外,对高收入国家(即“西方”)抑郁症的研究通常为这些说法提供了依据。这篇文章纠正了这些疏忽。它报告了由惠康资助的R-NEET研究的方法:这是一项多学科、多系统、混合方法的纵向研究,研究非洲青年的适应力,这些青年的“未受教育、未就业或未接受培训”(NEET)状态使他们不成比例地容易患抑郁症。R-NEET研究由南非和尼日利亚的学者、社区服务提供者和青年与英国、加拿大和美国的合作伙伴共同设计,正在确定与抑郁症不同轨迹相关的生理、心理、社会、经济、体制和环境风险和资源。本文以R-NEET研究的方法为例,提出了一种观点,即将弹性理解为一种基于背景和文化的能力,这种能力利用了年轻人所依赖的多种共同发生的系统来支持他们的福祉。承认和利用与复原力有关的多个系统,对于寻求支持年轻人茁壮成长的研究人员和精神卫生提供者至关重要,对于保护或促进他们的心理健康的年轻人本身也至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Multisystemic resilience and its impact on youth mental health: reflections on co-designing a multi-disciplinary, participatory study.

Youth depression is a global emergency. Redressing this emergency requires a sophisticated understanding of the multisystemic risks and biopsychosocial, economic, and environmental resources associated with young people's experiences of no/limited versus severe depression. Too often, however, personal risks and a focus on individual-level protective resources dominate accounts of young people's trajectories towards depression. Further, studies of depression in high-income countries (i.e., "western") typically inform these accounts. This article corrects these oversights. It reports on the methodology of the Wellcome-funded R-NEET study: a multidisciplinary, multisystemic, mixed method longitudinal study of resilience among African youth whose status as "not in education, employment or training" (NEET) makes them disproportionately vulnerable to depression. Co-designed by academics, community-based service providers and youth in South Africa and Nigeria, with partnerships in the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States, the R-NEET study is identifying the physiological, psychological, social, economic, institutional, and environmental risks and resources associated with distinct trajectories of depression. Using the methodology of the R-NEET study as exemplar, this article advances an argument for understanding resilience as a contextually and culturally rooted capacity that draws on the multiple, co-occurring systems that young people depend upon to support their wellbeing. Acknowledging and harnessing the multiple systems implicated in resilience is critical to researchers and mental health providers who seek to support young people to thrive, and to young people themselves when protecting or promoting their mental wellbeing.

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