Cargando…
The 2015 Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an Australian population cohort
PURPOSE: The Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) was designed as a computerised self-report assessment of children’s mental health and well-being at approximately 11 years of age, conducted with a population cohort of 87 026 children being studied longitudinally within the New South Wales (NSW) Child Deve...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
BMJ Publishing Group
2017
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5726143/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28645979 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016244 |
_version_ | 1783285682382307328 |
---|---|
author | Laurens, Kristin R Tzoumakis, Stacy Dean, Kimberlie Brinkman, Sally A Bore, Miles Lenroot, Rhoshel K Smith, Maxwell Holbrook, Allyson Robinson, Kim M Stevens, Robert Harris, Felicity Carr, Vaughan J Green, Melissa J |
author_facet | Laurens, Kristin R Tzoumakis, Stacy Dean, Kimberlie Brinkman, Sally A Bore, Miles Lenroot, Rhoshel K Smith, Maxwell Holbrook, Allyson Robinson, Kim M Stevens, Robert Harris, Felicity Carr, Vaughan J Green, Melissa J |
author_sort | Laurens, Kristin R |
collection | PubMed |
description | PURPOSE: The Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) was designed as a computerised self-report assessment of children’s mental health and well-being at approximately 11 years of age, conducted with a population cohort of 87 026 children being studied longitudinally within the New South Wales (NSW) Child Development Study. PARTICIPANTS: School Principals provided written consent for teachers to administer the MCS in class to year 6 students at 829 NSW schools (35.0% of eligible schools). Parent or child opt-outs from participation were received for 4.3% of children, and MCS data obtained from 27 808 children (mean age 11.5 years, SD 0.5; 49.5% female), representing 85.9% of students at participating schools. FINDINGS TO DATE: Demographic characteristics of participating schools and children are representative of the NSW population. Children completed items measuring Social Integration, Prosocial Behaviour, Peer Relationship Problems, Supportive Relationships (at Home, School and in the Community), Empathy, Emotional Symptoms, Conduct Problems, Aggression, Attention, Inhibitory Control, Hyperactivity-Inattention, Total Difficulties (internalising and externalising psychopathology), Perceptual Sensitivity, Psychotic-Like Experiences, Personality, Self-esteem, Daytime Sleepiness and Connection to Nature. Distributions of responses on each item and construct demarcate competencies and vulnerabilities within the population: most children report mental health and well-being, but the population distribution spanned the full range of possible scores on every construct. FUTURE PLANS: Multiagency, intergenerational linkage of the MCS data with health, education, child protection, justice and early childhood development records took place late in 2016. Linked data were used to elucidate patterns of risk and protection across early and middle child development, and these data will provide a foundation for future record linkages in the cohort that will track mental and physical health, social and educational/occupational outcomes into adolescence and early adulthood. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5726143 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2017 |
publisher | BMJ Publishing Group |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-57261432017-12-20 The 2015 Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an Australian population cohort Laurens, Kristin R Tzoumakis, Stacy Dean, Kimberlie Brinkman, Sally A Bore, Miles Lenroot, Rhoshel K Smith, Maxwell Holbrook, Allyson Robinson, Kim M Stevens, Robert Harris, Felicity Carr, Vaughan J Green, Melissa J BMJ Open Mental Health PURPOSE: The Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) was designed as a computerised self-report assessment of children’s mental health and well-being at approximately 11 years of age, conducted with a population cohort of 87 026 children being studied longitudinally within the New South Wales (NSW) Child Development Study. PARTICIPANTS: School Principals provided written consent for teachers to administer the MCS in class to year 6 students at 829 NSW schools (35.0% of eligible schools). Parent or child opt-outs from participation were received for 4.3% of children, and MCS data obtained from 27 808 children (mean age 11.5 years, SD 0.5; 49.5% female), representing 85.9% of students at participating schools. FINDINGS TO DATE: Demographic characteristics of participating schools and children are representative of the NSW population. Children completed items measuring Social Integration, Prosocial Behaviour, Peer Relationship Problems, Supportive Relationships (at Home, School and in the Community), Empathy, Emotional Symptoms, Conduct Problems, Aggression, Attention, Inhibitory Control, Hyperactivity-Inattention, Total Difficulties (internalising and externalising psychopathology), Perceptual Sensitivity, Psychotic-Like Experiences, Personality, Self-esteem, Daytime Sleepiness and Connection to Nature. Distributions of responses on each item and construct demarcate competencies and vulnerabilities within the population: most children report mental health and well-being, but the population distribution spanned the full range of possible scores on every construct. FUTURE PLANS: Multiagency, intergenerational linkage of the MCS data with health, education, child protection, justice and early childhood development records took place late in 2016. Linked data were used to elucidate patterns of risk and protection across early and middle child development, and these data will provide a foundation for future record linkages in the cohort that will track mental and physical health, social and educational/occupational outcomes into adolescence and early adulthood. BMJ Publishing Group 2017-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5726143/ /pubmed/28645979 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016244 Text en © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted. This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ |
spellingShingle | Mental Health Laurens, Kristin R Tzoumakis, Stacy Dean, Kimberlie Brinkman, Sally A Bore, Miles Lenroot, Rhoshel K Smith, Maxwell Holbrook, Allyson Robinson, Kim M Stevens, Robert Harris, Felicity Carr, Vaughan J Green, Melissa J The 2015 Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an Australian population cohort |
title | The 2015 Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an Australian population cohort |
title_full | The 2015 Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an Australian population cohort |
title_fullStr | The 2015 Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an Australian population cohort |
title_full_unstemmed | The 2015 Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an Australian population cohort |
title_short | The 2015 Middle Childhood Survey (MCS) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an Australian population cohort |
title_sort | 2015 middle childhood survey (mcs) of mental health and well-being at age 11 years in an australian population cohort |
topic | Mental Health |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5726143/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28645979 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016244 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT laurenskristinr the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT tzoumakisstacy the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT deankimberlie the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT brinkmansallya the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT boremiles the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT lenrootrhoshelk the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT smithmaxwell the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT holbrookallyson the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT robinsonkimm the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT stevensrobert the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT harrisfelicity the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT carrvaughanj the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT greenmelissaj the2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT laurenskristinr 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT tzoumakisstacy 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT deankimberlie 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT brinkmansallya 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT boremiles 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT lenrootrhoshelk 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT smithmaxwell 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT holbrookallyson 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT robinsonkimm 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT stevensrobert 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT harrisfelicity 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT carrvaughanj 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort AT greenmelissaj 2015middlechildhoodsurveymcsofmentalhealthandwellbeingatage11yearsinanaustralianpopulationcohort |