Student- and school-level factors associated with mental health and well-being in early adolescence
Hinze, V; Montero-Marin, J; Blakemore, S-J; et al.Byford, S; Dalgleish, T; Degli Esposti, M; Greenberg, MT; Jones, BG; Slaghekke, Y; Ukoumunne, OC; Viner, RM; Williams, JMG; Ford, TJ; Kuyken, W
Date: 19 October 2023
Article
Journal
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Publisher
Elsevier / American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Objective
Adolescence is a key developmental window that may determine long-term mental health. As schools may influence mental health of students, this study aimed to examine the association of school-level characteristics with students’ mental health over time.
Method
Longitudinal data from a cluster randomized controlled trial ...
Objective
Adolescence is a key developmental window that may determine long-term mental health. As schools may influence mental health of students, this study aimed to examine the association of school-level characteristics with students’ mental health over time.
Method
Longitudinal data from a cluster randomized controlled trial comprising 8,376 students (55% female; aged 11-14 years at baseline) across 84 schools in the United Kingdom were analyzed. Data collection started in the academic years 2016/2017 (cohort 1) and 2017/2018 (cohort 2), with follow-up at 1, 1.5, and 2 years. Students’ mental health (risk for depression [Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale], social-emotional-behavioral difficulties [Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire]) and well-being (Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale) and relationships with student- and school-level characteristics were explored using multilevel regression models.
Results
Mental health difficulties and poorer well-being increased over time, particularly in girls. Differences among schools represented a small but statistically significant proportion of variation (95% CI) in students’ mental health at each time point: depression, 1.7% (0.9%-2.5%) to 2.5% (1.6%-3.4%); social-emotional-behavioral difficulties, 1.9% (1.1%-2.7%) to 2.8% (2.1%-3.5%); and well-being, 1.8% (0.9%-2.7%) to 2.2% (1.4%-3.0%). Better student-rated school climate analyzed as a time-varying factor at the student and school level was associated with lower risk of depression (regression coefficient [95%CI] student level: −4.25 [−4.48, −4.01]; school level: −4.28 [−5.81, −2.75]), fewer social-emotional-behavioral difficulties (student level: −2.46 [−2.57, −2.35]; school level: −2.36 [−3.08, −1.63]), and higher well-being (student level: 3.88 [3.70, 4.05]; school-level: 4.28 [3.17, 5.38]), which was a stable relationship.
Conclusion
Student-rated school climate predicted mental health in early adolescence. Policy and system interventions that focus on school climate may promote students’ mental health.
Health and Community Sciences
Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0
Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2023 American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the
CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).