| Literature DB >> 36123056 |
Amy E Nesbitt1, Catherine M Sabiston2, Melissa L deJonge2, Skye Pamela Barbic3,4, Nicole Kozloff5,6, Emily Joan Nalder7,8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Transition-age youth (16-29 years old) are disproportionately affected by the onset, impact and burden of serious mental illness (SMI; for example, depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia spectrum disorders). Emerging evidence has increasingly highlighted the concept of resilience in mental health promotion and treatment approaches for this population. A comprehensive synthesis of existing evidence is needed to enhance conceptual clarity in this area, identify knowledge gaps, and inform future research and practice. As such, the present scoping review is guided by the following questions: How has resilience been conceptualised and operationalised in the transition-age youth mental health literature? What factors influence resilience among transition-age youth with SMI, and what outcomes have been studied within the context of transition-age youth's mental health recovery? METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The present protocol will follow six key stages, in accordance with Arksey and O'Malley's (2005) established scoping review methodology and recent iterations of this framework, and has been registered with Open Science Framework (https://osf.io/rzfc5). The protocol and review process will be carried out by a multidisciplinary team in consultation with community stakeholders. A comprehensive search strategy will be conducted across multiple electronic databases to identify relevant empirical literature. Included sources will address the population of transition-age youth (16-29 years) diagnosed with SMI, the concept of resilience (in any context) and will report original research written in English. Data screening and extraction will be completed by at least two independent reviewers. Following meta-narrative review and qualitative content analyses, findings will be synthesised as a descriptive overview with tabular and graphical summaries. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: University of Toronto Health Sciences Research Ethics Board approval was obtained to complete the community stakeholder consultation stage of this review. Results will be disseminated through conference presentations, publications, and user-friendly reports and graphics. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: MENTAL HEALTH; PSYCHIATRY; PUBLIC HEALTH
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36123056 PMCID: PMC9486183 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-059826
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 3.006
Draft charting form
| General document details | |
| APA citation | Full author, date and journal details. |
| Country and location | Country of publication (and location if provided). |
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| Study purpose | Purpose, research question(s), aim(s), and/or objective(s) of the study. |
| Study population and sample size | Age range, SMI (clinical diagnosis/self-reported; stage of illness), relevant demographic characteristics. Number of participants. |
| Study design and methods | Quantitative, qualitative or mixed methods. Main experimental, observational or qualitative methods used. |
| Intervention (if applicable): description of key characteristics (eg, intervention purpose/target, type, main components, duration). | |
| Youth engagement (if applicable): extent to which youth with SMI were engaged through aspects of the research process. | |
| Intersectional approaches (if applicable): description of recruitment procedures, theoretical frameworks, and analyses addressing diversity and intersecting social identities of participants. | |
| Context | The setting of the research if provided (eg, community, health-oriented, specific treatment/programme). |
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| Conceptualisation | How was resilience described from a process-oriented perspective? |
| Definition of resilience | Definition or operationalisation of resilience. |
| Theoretical framework/model | Theory, conceptual model(s) or framework(s) applied. |
| Seminal papers referenced | Overarching paradigm and seminal conceptual papers that have informed the research (if applicable). |
| Instruments used to measure resilience | Specific measures/surveys employed (if applicable). |
| Academic discipline | Broad field of research or practice. |
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| Adversity/risks | Personal or environmental risk factors identified (if applicable). |
| Internal/external protective factors | Personal or environmental protective factors identified (if applicable). |
| Self-regulatory strategies | Strategies identified to self-manage mood, emotions, thoughts, and/or behaviours (if applicable). |
| Study outcomes | Any outcomes that were measured or described. Description of positive change, resilience-related outcomes or adaptation (if applicable). |
| Important results | Description of main findings and implications. |
SMI, serious mental illness.