| Literature DB >> 35735401 |
Gautham Melur Sukumar1, Swati S Shahane2, Anusha B Shenoy2, Srividya Rudrapattana Nagaraja2, Prathyusha P Vasuki3, Prathap Lingaiah4, Shalini Rajneesh5, Pradeep S Banandur1.
Abstract
(1) Background: To empower and facilitate mental health promotion for nearly 18 million youth, a pioneering state-wide Life Skills Training and Counselling Services Program (LSTCP) was implemented in Karnataka, India. This study assesses the changes in life skills scores, level of life skills and factors associated with increased life skills among participants of the LSTCP. (2) Method: This pre-post study design was conducted on 2669 participants who underwent a six-day structured LSTCP. Changes in mean life skills scores and level of life skill categories pre- and post-LSTCP were assessed. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to assess the factors associated with increases in life skills. (3)Entities:
Keywords: Yuva Spandana; life skills; mental health; training; youth
Year: 2022 PMID: 35735401 PMCID: PMC9220777 DOI: 10.3390/bs12060191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Details of pre- and post-test questionnaire for assessment of life skills among participants attending the LSTCP.
| Section Number | Section Name | Assessment Focus and Scale Used | Number of Items | Operational Definition and Scoring Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Interview Information #,* | Auto-assigned unique ID, Name, Address, Date and place, Consent information | 17 | NS |
| 2 | Editing and Data entry #,* | Details of data entry | 12 | NS |
| 3 | Socio-demographic characteristics # | Socio-demographic characteristics of the respondents, including number of family members, age, occupation, education and marital status | 13 | NS |
| 4 | Family environment #,* | Communication with family members, Arguments, Criticism, Time spent with family members, Decision making and Family support issues | 20 | NS |
| 5 | Socio-economic characteristics # | Ownership of house, agricultural land and livestock. Monthly income and expenditure. | 7 | NS |
| 6 | Personal and family health # | Morbidity and hospitalisation information of self and family members | 10 | NS |
| 7 | Diet and eating habits # | Type of diet and dietary practises | 3 | NS |
| 8, 9, 10, 11 | Substance Use * | Tobacco smoking | 9 | |
| A score of two ‘yes’ responses constitutes a positive screening test | ||||
| Tobacco chewing | 9 | Fagerstrom scale [ | ||
| Score | ||||
| <4—moderate dependence | ||||
| 5+—significant dependence | ||||
| Alcohol use and dependence | 16 | M.I.N.I—5.0.0 scale [ | ||
| Injecting/sniffing/oral drugs | 7 (Screening questions and scale items) | C.A.G.E—AID [ | ||
| 12 | Violence-related information # | Experience of violence, Types of violence experienced, Hospitalisation due to injuries, Violence inflicted: person involved | 6 | NS |
| 13 | Depression | Symptoms of depression | 9 | M.I.N.I—5.0.0 Scale [ |
| 14 | Generalised Anxiety Disorder | Symptoms of anxiety | 7 | M.I.N.I—5.0.0 Scale [ |
| 15 | Self-harm | Suicidal ideation and behaviour | 16 | M.I.N.I.—5.0.0 Scale [ |
| 1–8 points—Low | ||||
| 9–16 points—Moderate | ||||
| >17 points—High | ||||
| 16 | Injuries and related # | Injury experiences, Types of injuries experienced | 3 | NS |
| 17 | Physical Activity # | Time spent on different physical activities | 3 | NS |
| 18 | Sexual Behaviour # | Duration of Sexual activity, Number of partners, Use of condoms | 6 | NS |
| 19 | Work Environment and Job Satisfaction # | Type of organisation, Change of job, Job satisfaction, Duration of outdoor stay at work | 23 | NS |
| 20 | Teaching Factors #,* | Mode of teaching, Preferred mode of teaching, Perception about teaching abilities, knowledge, technology | 8 | NS |
| 21 | Peer group and social capital # | Number of peers, Activities performed with peers, Peer characteristics | 8 | NS |
| 22 | Behavioural Factors #,* | Self-talk, Crisis related information, Personality factors | 46 | Personality factors (Big Five Inventory-10) [ |
| 23 | Life skills * | Life skills of an individual | 115 | Life Skills scale [ |
| ≤397—Low Life skills | ||||
| 398–437—Moderate Life skills | ||||
| 438+—High Life skills | ||||
| 24 | Quality of Life * | General health and physical, psychological, social and environmental quality of life | 26 | WHO-Quality of Life—BREF [ |
| 25 | Exposure to Media and related #,* | Information related to usage, time spent, kinds of programs, reasons to watch TV, Internet, Video tape, Video games, Mobile phone usage and risk of addiction | 12 | Cell phone overuse and addiction [ |
* These 12 questionnaires were also included in the post-test questionnaire. # Questionnaires were developed for the present study. NS—Not Scored.
Life skill scores (pre–post training) and participants with increased life skills score post-training by select socio-demographic variables.
| X | Life Skills Scores | Increased in Life Skills Score Post-Training | χ2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Training | Post-Training | Mean Difference | Yes | No | Total | |||
| Mean ± SD | Mean ± SD |
| ||||||
| Number of participants | 455.67 ± 40.84 | 463.37 ± 41.25 | 7.71 # | 1351 (58.16) | 972 (41.84) | 2323 (100.00) | 10.84 $ | <0.001 * |
|
| ||||||||
| 18–35 | 450.69 ± 41.98 | 463.28 ± 44.22 | 12.59 # | 485 (63.90) | 274 (36.10) | 759 | 15.3 | <0.001 * |
| 36–50 | 458.09 ± 39.06 | 463.49 ± 39.31 | 5.41 # | 728 (55.61) | 581 (44.39) | 1309 | ||
| 51 and above | 458.71 ± 43.12 | 463.14 ± 41.89 | 4.44 # | 129 (54.20) | 109 (45.80) | 238 | ||
|
| ||||||||
| Rural | 463.17 ± 41.44 | 454.58 ± 40.64 | 8.59 # | 577 (60.23) | 381 (39.77) | 958 | 2.88 | 0.09 |
| Urban | 456.43 ± 40.97 | 463.52 ± 41.12 | 7.08 # | 774 (56.70) | 591 (43.30) | 1365 | ||
|
| ||||||||
| Male | 455.75 ± 41.56 | 462.14 ± 41.83 | 6.38 # | 902 (56.09) | 706 (43.91) | 1608 | 9.14 | 0.003 * |
| Female | 455.46 ± 39.21 | 466.15 ± 39.79 | 10.69 # | 449 (62.80) | 266 (37.20) | 715 | ||
|
| ||||||||
| Hindu | 455.86 ± 40.47 | 464.07 ± 40.43 | 8.2 # | 1266 (58.91) | 883 (41.09) | 2149 | 5.84 | 0.02 * |
| Others | 453.04 ± 45.56 | 455.11 ± 49.90 | 2.06 # | 84 (49.41) | 86 (50.59) | 170 | ||
|
| ||||||||
| Post-graduation and above | 456.45 ± 40.99 | 463.76 ± 41.44 | 7.3 # | 1211 (57.23) | 905 (42.77) | 2116 | 8.38 | 0.004 * |
| Till Degree/Diploma | 447.64 ± 38.43 | 459.46 ± 39.13 | 11.82 # | 140 (67.63) | 67 (32.37) | 207 | ||
|
| ||||||||
| Salaried employment | 455.77 ± 40.84 | 463.37 ± 41.26 | 7.59 # | 1338 (58.02) | 968 (41.98) | 2306 | 0.26 | |
| Other works | 433.38 ± 39.23 | 459 ± 43.79 | 25.61 # | 10 (76.92) | 3 (23.08) | 13 | ||
|
| ||||||||
| Never married | 450.47 ± 42.48 | 461.06 ± 43.20 | 10.59 # | 271 (62.59) | 162 (37.41) | 433 | 6.46 | 0.04 * |
| Not living with spouse | 454.53 ± 41.69 | 467.82 ± 44.22 | 13.29 # | 33 (67.35) | 16 (32.65) | 49 | ||
| Living with spouse | 457.02 ± 40.24 | 463.94 ± 40.58 | 6.92 # | 1044 (56.86) | 792 (43.14) | 1836 | ||
LSTCP—Life Skills Training and Counselling Service Program, SD—Standard Deviation, χ2—test statistics of chi-square test for categorical variables, $—paired t-test, *—p value for chi-square test for categorical variables/Fisher’s exact test for categorical variables and paired t-test for continuous variable significant at 5%, # indicates that p value for mean difference is significant at 5%.
Pre- and post-score assessment of life skill domains among participants of the LSTCSP (n = 2669).
| Life Skills Domains | Before the Training | After the Training (Post-Test) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | ||||
| Decision making | 36.65 (3.97) | 36.83 (4.04) | 2.50 | 0.0124 * |
| Problem solving | 53.68 (6.13) | 54.70 (6.08) | 9.56 | <0.001 * |
| Empathy | 48.14 (5.56) | 45.02 (5.29) | −30.11 | <0.001 * |
| Self-awareness | 41.26 (4.74) | 40.44 (4.35) | −9.08 | <0.001 * |
| Communication skills | 38.77 (4.35) | 39.85 (4.50) | 13.11 | <0.001 * |
| Interpersonal relationship skills | 72.98 (7.22) | 73.88 (7.41) | 6.93 | <0.001 * |
| Coping with Emotions | 35.98 (3.99) | 36.40 (3.97) | 5.35 | <0.001 * |
| Coping with stress | 34.60 (4.18) | 35.61 (4.04) | 12.65 | <0.001 * |
| Creative Thinking | 53.96 (7.28) | 56.21 (6.95) | 17.75 | <0.001 * |
| Critical thinking | 39.37 (5.08) | 39.70 (4.76) | 3.66 | 0.0003 * |
| Life skills total score | 455.30 (40.97) | 463.10 (41.39) | 10.84 | <0.001 * |
* p value < 0.05, t—paired t-test statistics, SD—Standard Deviation.
Change in life skill levels (categories) pre- and post-training (n = 2323).
| X | Levels | Post-Test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moderate | High | Total | χ2 | |||
|
|
| 437 (60.95) | 280 (39.05) | 717 | <0.001 | |
|
| 185 (11.52) | 1421 (88.48) | 1606 | |||
|
| 622 (26.78) | 1701 (73.22) | 2323 | 19.41 | ||
* p value < 0.05, χ2—McNemar–Bowker test statistics value, n (%)—number and percentage.
Factors associated with increase in life skills among participants (binary logistic regression).
| Factor | Crude Odds Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| 36–50 | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| 18–35 | 1.41 | 1.18–1.70 | <0.001 * |
| 51 and above | 0.94 | 0.72–1.25 | 0.69 |
|
| |||
| Male | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Female | 1.32 | 1.10–1.58 | 0.003 * |
|
| |||
| Unmarried | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Not living with spouse | 1.23 | 0.66–2.31 | 0.51 |
| Married | 0.79 | 0.64–0.98 | 0.03 * |
|
| |||
| Post-graduation & above | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Till Degree/Diploma | 1.56 | 1.15–2.12 | 0.004 * |
|
| |||
| Yes | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| No | 1.24 | 0.95–1.60 | 0.11 |
|
| |||
| Yes | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| No | 1.18 | 0.96–1.45 | 0.107 |
|
| |||
| Yes | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| No | 0.53 | 0.23–1.19 | 0.125 |
|
| |||
| Extroversion score | 1.13 | 1.03–1.24 | 0.007 * |
| Agreeableness score | 1.1 | 1.003–1.198 | 0.042 * |
| Conscientiousness score | 1.09 | 1.002–1.18 | 0.045 * |
| Neuroticism score | 0.87 | 0.79–0.96 | 0.004 * |
| Openness score | 0.89 | 0.73–1.10 | 0.28 |
|
| |||
| Physical quality of life | 1.03 | 1.02–1.03 | <0.001 * |
| Psychological quality of life | 1.03 | 1.02–1.04 | <0.001 * |
| Social quality of life | 1.02 | 1.01–1.02 | <0.001 * |
| Environmental quality of life | 1.02 | 1.01–1.03 | <0.001 * |
* p value significant at <0.05.
Factors associated with increase in life skills among participants (multiple logistic regression).
| Factor | Crude Odds Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | Adjusted Odds Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| 36–50 | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| 18–35 | 1.41 | 1.18–1.70 | <0.001 * | 1.34 | 1.11–1.62 | 0.003 * |
| 51 and above | 0.94 | 0.72–1.25 | 0.69 | 0.94 | 0.71–1.25 | 0.67 |
|
| ||||||
| Male | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Female | 1.32 | 1.10–1.58 | 0.003 * | 1.39 | 1.15–1.68 | 0.001 * |
|
| ||||||
| Till Degree/Diploma | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Post-graduation and above | 1.56 | 1.15–2.12 | 0.004 * | 1.44 | 1.05–1.97 | <0.001 * |
|
| ||||||
| Physical quality of life | 1.03 | 1.02–1.03 | <0.001 * | 1.02 | 1.01–1.03 | <0.001 * |
| Psychological quality of life | 1.03 | 1.02–1.04 | <0.001 * | 1.02 | 1.01–1.03 | <0.001 * |
* p value significant at <0.05.