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Resilience in adolescence during the COVID-19 crisis in Canada

Resilience in adolescence during the COVID-19 crisis in Canada
Resilience in adolescence during the COVID-19 crisis in Canada

Background: the COVID-19 pandemic constitutes a social crisis that will have long-term health consequences for much of the global population, especially for adolescents. Adolescents are triply affected as they: 1) are experiencing its immediate, direct effects, 2) will carry forward health habits they develop now into adulthood, and 3) as future parents, will shape the early life health of the next generation. It is therefore imperative to assess how the pandemic is influencing adolescent wellbeing, identify sources of resilience, and outline strategies for attenuating its negative impacts.

Methods: we report the results of longitudinal analyses of qualitative data from 28 focus group discussions (FGDs) with 39 Canadian adolescents and of cross-sectional analyses of survey data from 482 Canadian adolescents gathered between September 2020 and August 2021. FGD participants and survey respondents reported on their: socio-demographic characteristics; mental health and wellbeing before and during the pandemic; pre- and during-pandemic health behaviours; experiences living through a crisis; current perceptions of their school, work, social, media, and governmental environments; and ideas about pandemic coping and mutual aid. We plotted themes emerging from FGDs along a pandemic timeline, noting socio-demographic variations. Following assessment for internal reliability and dimension reduction, quantitative health/wellbeing indicators were analyzed as functions of composite socio-demographic, health-behavioural, and health-environmental indicators.

Results: our mixed methods analyses indicate that adolescents faced considerable mental and physical health challenges due to the pandemic, and were generally in poorer health than expected in non-crisis times. Nevertheless, some participants showed significantly better outcomes than others, specifically those who: got more exercise; slept better; were food secure; had clearer routines; spent more time in nature, deep in-person social relationships, and leisure; and spent less time on social media.

Conclusions: support for youth during times of crisis is essential to future population health because adolescence is a period in the life course which shapes the health behaviours, socio-economic capacities, and neurophysiology of these future parents/carers and leaders. Efforts to promote resilience in adolescents should leverage the factors identified above: helping them find structure and senses of purpose through strong social connections, well-supported work and leisure environments, and opportunities to engage with nature.

Adolescent, COVID-19/epidemiology, Canada/epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Pandemics, Reproducibility of Results
1471-2458
Chin, J.
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Di Maio, J.
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Weeraratne, T.
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Kennedy, K.M.
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Oliver, L.K.
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Bouchard, M.
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Malhotra, D.
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Habashy, J.
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Ding, J.
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Bhopa, S.
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Strommer, S.
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Hardy-Johnson, P.
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Barker, M.
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Sloboda, D.M.
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McKerracher, L.
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Chin, J.
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Di Maio, J.
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Weeraratne, T.
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Kennedy, K.M.
0a7cf863-6d14-4ffa-a7a5-469d021d3158
Oliver, L.K.
702d6479-18e3-406e-a090-314ea3be18bb
Bouchard, M.
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Malhotra, D.
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Habashy, J.
5614924b-3813-4848-8df2-431feb916318
Ding, J.
0270c8b4-4223-4ad7-bc27-947064c0d9b4
Bhopa, S.
fc7b8150-6ff9-42be-afd6-97420736effd
Strommer, S.
a025047e-effa-4481-9bf4-48da1668649e
Hardy-Johnson, P.
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Barker, M.
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Sloboda, D.M.
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McKerracher, L.
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Chin, J., Di Maio, J., Weeraratne, T., Kennedy, K.M., Oliver, L.K., Bouchard, M., Malhotra, D., Habashy, J., Ding, J., Bhopa, S., Strommer, S., Hardy-Johnson, P., Barker, M., Sloboda, D.M. and McKerracher, L. (2023) Resilience in adolescence during the COVID-19 crisis in Canada. BMC Public Health, 23 (1), [1097]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-023-15813-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the COVID-19 pandemic constitutes a social crisis that will have long-term health consequences for much of the global population, especially for adolescents. Adolescents are triply affected as they: 1) are experiencing its immediate, direct effects, 2) will carry forward health habits they develop now into adulthood, and 3) as future parents, will shape the early life health of the next generation. It is therefore imperative to assess how the pandemic is influencing adolescent wellbeing, identify sources of resilience, and outline strategies for attenuating its negative impacts.

Methods: we report the results of longitudinal analyses of qualitative data from 28 focus group discussions (FGDs) with 39 Canadian adolescents and of cross-sectional analyses of survey data from 482 Canadian adolescents gathered between September 2020 and August 2021. FGD participants and survey respondents reported on their: socio-demographic characteristics; mental health and wellbeing before and during the pandemic; pre- and during-pandemic health behaviours; experiences living through a crisis; current perceptions of their school, work, social, media, and governmental environments; and ideas about pandemic coping and mutual aid. We plotted themes emerging from FGDs along a pandemic timeline, noting socio-demographic variations. Following assessment for internal reliability and dimension reduction, quantitative health/wellbeing indicators were analyzed as functions of composite socio-demographic, health-behavioural, and health-environmental indicators.

Results: our mixed methods analyses indicate that adolescents faced considerable mental and physical health challenges due to the pandemic, and were generally in poorer health than expected in non-crisis times. Nevertheless, some participants showed significantly better outcomes than others, specifically those who: got more exercise; slept better; were food secure; had clearer routines; spent more time in nature, deep in-person social relationships, and leisure; and spent less time on social media.

Conclusions: support for youth during times of crisis is essential to future population health because adolescence is a period in the life course which shapes the health behaviours, socio-economic capacities, and neurophysiology of these future parents/carers and leaders. Efforts to promote resilience in adolescents should leverage the factors identified above: helping them find structure and senses of purpose through strong social connections, well-supported work and leisure environments, and opportunities to engage with nature.

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s12889-023-15813-6 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 May 2023
Published date: 6 June 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: The research team would like to thank all of the participants for their time and sharing their stories. We also acknowledge the contributions of community partners, especially the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board, for reviewing and improving our research protocols, and for promoting the project among high school students, teachers, and parents and other guardians. We further acknowledge the expertise and time given by Sara Dickson and Dr Catharine Munn, who were both instrumental in training and preparing the research team to co-facilitate, respectively, art workshops and focus group discussions. Funding Information: The research and the authors of this paper were supported by the following funding sources: Canadian Institutes for Health Research, McMaster University Faculty of Health Sciences. DMS was also supported by the Canada Research Chairs Program, LMcK was also supported by the Aarhus Institute for Advanced Studies, the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement #754513 and the Aarhus University Research Foundation. Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
Keywords: Adolescent, COVID-19/epidemiology, Canada/epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Pandemics, Reproducibility of Results

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479029
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479029
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: 8b812326-3c29-4c81-9c8c-3c39e231e9a6
ORCID for P. Hardy-Johnson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9659-1447
ORCID for M. Barker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2976-0217

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Date deposited: 18 Jul 2023 16:55
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:40

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Contributors

Author: J. Chin
Author: J. Di Maio
Author: T. Weeraratne
Author: K.M. Kennedy
Author: L.K. Oliver
Author: M. Bouchard
Author: D. Malhotra
Author: J. Habashy
Author: J. Ding
Author: S. Bhopa
Author: S. Strommer
Author: P. Hardy-Johnson ORCID iD
Author: M. Barker ORCID iD
Author: D.M. Sloboda
Author: L. McKerracher

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