Investigating the Mental Health Impacts of Climate Change in Youth: Design and Implementation of the International Changing Worlds Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Climate Cares and the “Changing Worlds” Approach
2.1. Conceptualisation and Operationalisation of the Changing Worlds Study UK
2.1.1. Rationale
2.1.2. Conducting Research with Young People
2.1.3. Sampling and Distribution
2.2. The “Changing Worlds” Research Partnerships
2.2.1. Principles of Collaboration and Interdisciplinarity
2.2.2. Funding and Project Management
2.3. Local Adaptations of the ‘Changing Worlds’ Methodology
2.3.1. Survey Design and Content
2.3.2. Sampling, Recruitment and Data Collection
2.3.3. Data Analysis and Data-Sharing across International Borders
3. Dissemination of the Findings
4. Limitations and Recommendations
4.1. Working through Challenges as a Team
4.2. Lessons Learned
4.3. Envisioning a New Path Forward
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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UK | India | Caribbean | The Philippines | USA | |
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Lead organisation | Imperial College London | The George Institute for Global Health India | The University of the West Indies | St. Luke’s Planetary and Global Health Program | Stanford University Center for Innovation in Global Health |
Research team composition | The UK lead is based at the Institute for Global Health Innovation. Within-institution collaboration was established with the Grantham Institute for Climate Change and the Environment, and additional input was provided by researchers from the Centre for Environmental Policy, and the School of Public Health. | The George Institute for Global Health India was the lead organisation for the study | The Caribbean lead organisation was The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, and Cave Hill Campuses. Partners were also brought in from the University of Guyana and the College of Caribbean Family Physicians to support execution of the study. The team was assisted by a Queen Elizabeth Fellow from McGill University and supported by the UK study team. | The Philippines team comprises a globally recognised expert in Planetary Health (MD), a counselling practitioner, and an environmental psychology researcher, supported by junior researchers with multi-disciplinary training. The team was in the process of recruiting additional members to support the rollout of the survey and subsequent analysis. | The US lead recruited local data analysis support and epidemiology/biostatistics expertise from within the leading institution. Additional input was sought from a US-based climate-aware psychiatrist with a deep interest in young people’s mental health and climate agency to support the conceptual stages of the study and report writing. The UK team was an equal partner in the study. |
Disciplinary representation | Psychology; neuroscience; climate science; design; science communication; mental health; psychiatry; epidemiology | Psychiatry; public health; mental health | Medicine; public health; psychology; pharmacy; planetary health biostatistics | Planetary health; public health; medicine; psychology; environmental science; epidemiology; biostatistics | Psychology; mental health; planetary health; science communication; epidemiology |
Study dates/status | 2020–2021 Complete | 2021 Complete | 2021–2022 Complete (The survey was rolled out across Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, and Barbados with IRB approval from the University of the West Indies St. Augustine and Cave Hill, the University of Guyana, and the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO). PAHO has been spearheading a separate ethical approval process for a separate roll-out of the survey in Jamaica, which is anticipated in the latter part of 2023.) | 2023 | 2021–2022 Complete |
IRB approval | Imperial College Research Ethics Committee—approval number 20IC6060 | Independent Ethics Committee of The George Institute for Global Health New Delhi, India—Ref. no. 03/2021 | Trinidad and Tobago (CREC-SA.0941/05/2021, PAHOERC.0375.02); Guyana (IRB #107/2021); Barbados (IRB #210807-B) | As of the time of writing, being reviewed by the Institutional Ethics Review Committee of the St. Luke’s Medical Center, pending approval | Stanford University Institutional Review Board (IRB)—eProtocol #62589 |
Co-creation and stakeholder involvement in study design | Survey was drafted by Climate Cares researchers and reviewed/edited by
| Pre-existing adolescent expert advisory group (AEAG) that was part of another research study entitled “Adolescents’ Resilience and Treatment Needs for Mental Health in Indian Slums (ARTEMIS)” | Ambassadors were recruited from students at The University of the West Indies Cave Hill Campus (Barbados), St. Augustine Campus (Trinidad and Tobago), and The University of Guyana, or students in the Environmental or Medical Science Programmes at The University of the West Indies and The University of Trinidad and Tobago, or young people involved in climate change NGO’s in the Caribbean; The original survey was piloted with small sample (N = 30) and feedback was used to make changes to/contextualise the survey content. | The young person’s advisory group (YPAG) was recruited through nominations and referrals by major youth advocacy networks and organisations, consisting of eight young people representing different advocacy networks (e.g., mental health, climate change, social justice), regions of the country, and specific populations, including Indigenous representation. The YPAG was consulted on content, wording, translation into the Filipino language, formatting, and dissemination strategy. The YPAG also piloted the survey and gave feedback on length, questions, and factors that could contribute to attrition. | Young person’s advisory group (YPAG), which consisted of nine racially/ethnically and geographically diverse young people from across the USA. They were recruited through youth advocacy networks and social media. The YPAG was consulted on content (e.g., list of emotions), wording, and formatting. The YPAG piloted the survey and gave feedback on length, questions, and factors that could contribute to attrition. |
Survey topics | Climate change; COVID-19. | Climate change; COVID-19. | Climate change; COVID-19. | Climate change; COVID-19; Politics and election stress. | Primary focus on climate change; COVID-19. |
Survey content and local variations |
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Survey tool | Available on OSF: https://osf.io/9ewtn (accessed on 1 August 2023) | Available upon request | Available upon request | Available upon request | Available on OSF: https://osf.io/vr9xy (accessed on 3 July 2023) |
Operational variations |
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Recruitment and sampling strategy |
| Participants were recontacted from a pre-existing census project database [19] |
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| Paid research panel service (Qualtrics) with sampling to mirror the ethnicity breakdown and gender parity according to the most recent census, as well as targeted oversampling from geographic regions subject to (recent) extreme weather events and air pollution. |
Sample size and characteristics |
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Academic outputs (as of August 2023) | 2 academic papers (1 published, 1 in press) | 1 academic paper published in Lancet- Regional Health Southeast Asia on 20 April 2023 | 1 academic paper (submitted to peer review journal) | - | 1 academic paper (submitted to peer review journal; preprint available) |
Manuscript DOIs | https://doi.org/10.1016/s2542-5196(22)00172-3 https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/e3tpu (accessed on 1 August 2023) | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lansea.2023.100191 (accessed on 1 August 2023) | - | - | https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2698675/v1 (accessed on 1 August 2023) |
Data availability | https://osf.io/mgu6x (accessed on 3 July 2023) | Contact authors | Contact authors | Contact authors | Contact authors |
Other dissemination channels |
| The study findings were shared during a symposium held at the 9th World Congress of Asian Psychiatry (WCAP 2022) from 16–18 September 2022. | The National Health Research Conference of Trinidad and Tobago 2022. | - |
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Joint dissemination of findings | Network of Environmental Social Scientists seminar November 2022—https://www.nessaustralia.org/coping-with-eco-anxiety-in-a-pandemic/ (accessed on 1 August 2023) PHA 2022 Side Event—https://youtu.be/tyW7YiE61uk (accessed on 1 August 2023) |
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Vercammen, A.; Yatirajula, S.K.; Daniel, M.; Maharaj, S.; Campbell, M.H.; Greaves, N.; Guinto, R.; Aruta, J.J.B.; Peñamante, C.A.; Wray, B.; et al. Investigating the Mental Health Impacts of Climate Change in Youth: Design and Implementation of the International Changing Worlds Study. Challenges 2023, 14, 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe14030034
Vercammen A, Yatirajula SK, Daniel M, Maharaj S, Campbell MH, Greaves N, Guinto R, Aruta JJB, Peñamante CA, Wray B, et al. Investigating the Mental Health Impacts of Climate Change in Youth: Design and Implementation of the International Changing Worlds Study. Challenges. 2023; 14(3):34. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe14030034
Chicago/Turabian StyleVercammen, Ans, Sandhya Kanaka Yatirajula, Mercian Daniel, Sandeep Maharaj, Michael H. Campbell, Natalie Greaves, Renzo Guinto, John Jamir Benzon Aruta, Criselle Angeline Peñamante, Britt Wray, and et al. 2023. "Investigating the Mental Health Impacts of Climate Change in Youth: Design and Implementation of the International Changing Worlds Study" Challenges 14, no. 3: 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe14030034
APA StyleVercammen, A., Yatirajula, S. K., Daniel, M., Maharaj, S., Campbell, M. H., Greaves, N., Guinto, R., Aruta, J. J. B., Peñamante, C. A., Wray, B., & Lawrance, E. L. (2023). Investigating the Mental Health Impacts of Climate Change in Youth: Design and Implementation of the International Changing Worlds Study. Challenges, 14(3), 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe14030034