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The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships

BACKGROUND: Adolescence is characterized by marked psychosocial, behavioural and biological changes and represents a critical life transition through which adult health and well-being are established. Substantial research confirms the role of psycho-social and environmental influences on this transi...

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Autores principales: Steinbeck, Katharine, Hazell, Philip, Cumming, Robert G, Skinner, S Rachel, Ivers, Rebecca, Booy, Robert, Fulcher, Greg, Handelsman, David J, Martin, Andrew J, Morgan, Geoff, Starling, Jean, Bauman, Adrian, Rawsthorne, Margot L, Bennett, David L, Chow, Chin Moi, Lam, Mary K, Kelly, Patrick, Brown, Ngiare J, Paxton, Karen, Hawke, Catherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3496596/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22950846
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-12-143
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author Steinbeck, Katharine
Hazell, Philip
Cumming, Robert G
Skinner, S Rachel
Ivers, Rebecca
Booy, Robert
Fulcher, Greg
Handelsman, David J
Martin, Andrew J
Morgan, Geoff
Starling, Jean
Bauman, Adrian
Rawsthorne, Margot L
Bennett, David L
Chow, Chin Moi
Lam, Mary K
Kelly, Patrick
Brown, Ngiare J
Paxton, Karen
Hawke, Catherine
author_facet Steinbeck, Katharine
Hazell, Philip
Cumming, Robert G
Skinner, S Rachel
Ivers, Rebecca
Booy, Robert
Fulcher, Greg
Handelsman, David J
Martin, Andrew J
Morgan, Geoff
Starling, Jean
Bauman, Adrian
Rawsthorne, Margot L
Bennett, David L
Chow, Chin Moi
Lam, Mary K
Kelly, Patrick
Brown, Ngiare J
Paxton, Karen
Hawke, Catherine
author_sort Steinbeck, Katharine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Adolescence is characterized by marked psychosocial, behavioural and biological changes and represents a critical life transition through which adult health and well-being are established. Substantial research confirms the role of psycho-social and environmental influences on this transition, but objective research examining the role of puberty hormones, testosterone in males and oestradiol in females (as biomarkers of puberty) on adolescent events is lacking. Neither has the tempo of puberty, the time from onset to completion of puberty within an individual been studied, nor the interaction between age of onset and tempo. This study has been designed to provide evidence on the relationship between reproductive hormones and the tempo of their rise to adult levels, and adolescent behaviour, health and wellbeing. METHODS/DESIGN: The ARCHER study is a multidisciplinary, prospective, longitudinal cohort study in 400 adolescents to be conducted in two centres in regional Australia in the State of New South Wales. The overall aim is to determine how changes over time in puberty hormones independently affect the study endpoints which describe universal and risk behaviours, mental health and physical status in adolescents. Recruitment will commence in school grades 5, 6 and 7 (10–12 years of age). Data collection includes participant and parent questionnaires, anthropometry, blood and urine collection and geocoding. Data analysis will include testing the reliability and validity of the chosen measures of puberty for subsequent statistical modeling to assess the impact over time of tempo and onset of puberty (and their interaction) and mean-level repeated measures analyses to explore for significant upward and downward shifts on target outcomes as a function of main effects. DISCUSSION: The strengths of this study include enrollment starting in the earliest stages of puberty, the use of frequent urine samples in addition to annual blood samples to measure puberty hormones, and the simultaneous use of parental questionnaires.
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spelling pubmed-34965962012-11-14 The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships Steinbeck, Katharine Hazell, Philip Cumming, Robert G Skinner, S Rachel Ivers, Rebecca Booy, Robert Fulcher, Greg Handelsman, David J Martin, Andrew J Morgan, Geoff Starling, Jean Bauman, Adrian Rawsthorne, Margot L Bennett, David L Chow, Chin Moi Lam, Mary K Kelly, Patrick Brown, Ngiare J Paxton, Karen Hawke, Catherine BMC Pediatr Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Adolescence is characterized by marked psychosocial, behavioural and biological changes and represents a critical life transition through which adult health and well-being are established. Substantial research confirms the role of psycho-social and environmental influences on this transition, but objective research examining the role of puberty hormones, testosterone in males and oestradiol in females (as biomarkers of puberty) on adolescent events is lacking. Neither has the tempo of puberty, the time from onset to completion of puberty within an individual been studied, nor the interaction between age of onset and tempo. This study has been designed to provide evidence on the relationship between reproductive hormones and the tempo of their rise to adult levels, and adolescent behaviour, health and wellbeing. METHODS/DESIGN: The ARCHER study is a multidisciplinary, prospective, longitudinal cohort study in 400 adolescents to be conducted in two centres in regional Australia in the State of New South Wales. The overall aim is to determine how changes over time in puberty hormones independently affect the study endpoints which describe universal and risk behaviours, mental health and physical status in adolescents. Recruitment will commence in school grades 5, 6 and 7 (10–12 years of age). Data collection includes participant and parent questionnaires, anthropometry, blood and urine collection and geocoding. Data analysis will include testing the reliability and validity of the chosen measures of puberty for subsequent statistical modeling to assess the impact over time of tempo and onset of puberty (and their interaction) and mean-level repeated measures analyses to explore for significant upward and downward shifts on target outcomes as a function of main effects. DISCUSSION: The strengths of this study include enrollment starting in the earliest stages of puberty, the use of frequent urine samples in addition to annual blood samples to measure puberty hormones, and the simultaneous use of parental questionnaires. BioMed Central 2012-09-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3496596/ /pubmed/22950846 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-12-143 Text en Copyright ©2012 Steinbeck et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Steinbeck, Katharine
Hazell, Philip
Cumming, Robert G
Skinner, S Rachel
Ivers, Rebecca
Booy, Robert
Fulcher, Greg
Handelsman, David J
Martin, Andrew J
Morgan, Geoff
Starling, Jean
Bauman, Adrian
Rawsthorne, Margot L
Bennett, David L
Chow, Chin Moi
Lam, Mary K
Kelly, Patrick
Brown, Ngiare J
Paxton, Karen
Hawke, Catherine
The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships
title The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships
title_full The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships
title_fullStr The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships
title_full_unstemmed The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships
title_short The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships
title_sort study design and methodology for the archer study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3496596/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22950846
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-12-143
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