| Literature DB >> 32800426 |
David A Ross1, Rachael Hinton2, Meheret Melles-Brewer2, Danielle Engel3, Willibald Zeck4, Lucy Fagan5, Joanna Herat6, Gogontlejang Phaladi7, David Imbago-Jácome8, Pauline Anyona9, Alicia Sanchez10, Nazneen Damji11, Fatiha Terki12, Valentina Baltag13, George Patton14, Avi Silverman15, Helga Fogstad2, Anshu Banerjee13, Anshu Mohan2.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32800426 PMCID: PMC7423586 DOI: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2020.06.042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adolesc Health ISSN: 1054-139X Impact factor: 5.012
The five domains of adolescent well-being that underpin the adolescent well-being framework
| No. | Domain | Subdomains | Requirements include | Type of well-being |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Good health and optimum nutrition | Physical health and capacities. Mental health and capacities. Optimal nutritional status and diet | Information, care, and services: access to valid and relevant information and affordable age-appropriate, high-quality, welcoming health services, care, and support, including for self-care. Healthy environment: such as safe water supply, hygiene, sanitation and without undue danger of injury in the home, safe roads, management of toxic substances in the home and community, access to safe green spaces, and no air pollution. Skills to navigate the environment safely. Physical activity: Has access to opportunities for adequate physical activity. Diet: Has access to local, culturally acceptable, adequate, diversified, balanced, and healthy diet commensurate to the individual's characteristics and requirements, to protect from all forms of malnutrition | Physical |
| 2. | Connectedness, positive values, and contribution to society | Connectedness: Is part of positive social and cultural networks and has positive, meaningful relationships with others, including family, peers, and, where relevant, teachers and employers. Valued and respected by others and accepted as part of the community. Attitudes: Responsible, caring, and has respect for others. Has a sense of ethics, integrity, and morality. Interpersonal skills: Empathy, friendship skills, and sensitivity. Activity: Socially, culturally, and civically active. Change and development: Equipped to contribute to change and development in their own lives and/or in their communities. | Connectedness: Has access to opportunities to become part of positive social and cultural networks and to develop positive, meaningful relationships with others, including family, peers, and, where relevant, teachers and employers. Valued: Has opportunities to be involved in decision-making and having their opinions taken seriously, with increasing space to influence and engage with their environment commensurate with their evolving capacities and stage of development. Attitudes: Has access to opportunities to develop personal responsibility, caring, and respect for others and to develop a sense of ethics, integrity and morality. Interpersonal skills: Has access to opportunities to develop empathy, friendship skills, and sensitivity. Activity: Has access to opportunities to be socially, culturally, and civically active that are appropriate to their evolving capacities and stage of development. Change and development: Has access to opportunities to develop the skills to be equipped to contribute to change and development in their own lives and/or in their communities. | Emotional |
| 3. | Safety and a supportive environment | Safety: Emotional and physical safety. Material conditions in the physical environment are met. Equity: Treated fairly and have an equal chance in life. Equality: Equal distribution of power, resources, rights, and opportunities for all. Nondiscrimination. Privacy. Responsive: Enriching the opportunities available to the adolescent. | Safety: Protection from all forms of violence and from exploitative commercial interests in families, communities, among peers and in schools, and the social and virtual environment. Material conditions: The adolescent's rights to food and nutrition, water, housing, heating, clothing, and physical security are met. Equity: There is a supportive legal framework and policies and equitable access to valid and relevant information, products, and high-quality services. Equality: Positive social norms, including gender norms, to ensure equal rights and opportunities for all adolescents. Nondiscrimination: Free to practice personal, cultural, and spiritual beliefs and to express their identity in a nondiscriminatory environment and have the liberty to access objective, factual information, and services without being exposed to judgmental attitudes. Privacy: Their personal information, views, interpretations, fears, and decisions, including those stored online, are not shared or disclosed without the adolescent's permission. Responsive: Has access to a wide range of safe and stimulating opportunities for leisure or personal development. | Physical |
| 4. | Learning, competence, education, skills, and employability | Learning: Has the commitment to, and motivation for, continual learning. Education. Resources, life skills, and competencies: Has the necessary cognitive, social, creative, and emotional resources, skills (life/decision-making) and competencies to thrive, including knowing their rights and how to claim them, and how to plan and make choices. Skills: Acquisition of technical, vocational, business, and creative skills to be able to take advantage of current or future economic, cultural, and social opportunities. Employability. Confidence that they can do things well. | Learning: Receives support to develop the commitment to, and motivation for, continual learning. Education: Has access to formal education until age 16, and opportunities for learning through formal or nonformal education or training beyond. Resources, life skills, and competencies: Has opportunities to develop the resources, skills (life/decision-making), and competencies to thrive. Skills: Has opportunities to develop relevant technical, vocational, business, and creative skills. Employability: Is given the opportunity to participate in nonexploitative and sustainable livelihoods and/or entrepreneurship appropriate for their age and stage of development. Confidence: Is given the necessary encouragement and opportunities to develop self-confidence and is empowered to feel that they can do things well. | Emotional |
| 5. | Agency and resilience | Agency: Has self-esteem, a sense of agency and of being empowered to make meaningful choices and to influence their social, political, and material environment and has the capacity for self-expression and self-direction appropriate to their evolving capacities and stage of development. Identity: Feels comfortable in their own self and with their identity(s), including their physical, cultural, social, sexual, and gender identity. Purpose: Has a sense of purpose, desire to succeed, and optimism about the future. Resilience: Equipped to handle adversities both now and in the future, in a way that is appropriate to their evolving capacities and stage of development. Fulfilment: Feels that they are fulfilling their potential now and that they will be able to do so in the future. | Agency: Has opportunities to develop self-esteem, a sense of agency, the ability to make meaningful choices and to influence their social, political and material environment, for self-expression and self-direction. Identity: Has the safe space to develop clarity and comfort in their own self and their identity(s), including their physical, cultural, social, sexual, and gender identity. Purpose: Has opportunities to develop a sense of purpose, desire to succeed, and optimism about the future. Resilience: Has opportunities to develop the ability to handle adversities both now and in the future, in a way that is appropriate to their evolving capacities and stage of development. Fulfilment: Has opportunities to fulfill their potential now and to be able to do so in the future. | Emotional |