Transcript
Alexis Brieant We know that the factors that contribute to youth mental health and wellbeing are extraordinarily complex and while the social environment, so things like peers and families, often receive a lot of attention in research, the physical environment is just as important. And the development of psychopathology we know is context specific and so, the places where children and adolescents live can profoundly influence their mental health and shape potential risks, but also opportunities for resilience.
So, I think it’s really important now because we know that so many health inequities are tied to youths’ place of residence. So, things like access to green space, neighbourhood safety, proximity to resources like schools and healthcare, these can all contribute to risk and resilience across development. And so, in order to address these disparities in youth mental health, we really need to better understand some of these environmental factors that might be driving inequities.
Given these considerations, I was hoping to better understand how children’s communities might serve as a protective factor for youth mental health and offset any risks. So, there’s some evidence that community cohesion, so a sense of trust and unity and support within a neighbourhood, can have positive benefits for youth development. And I wanted to look into this further and at the same time, wanted to explore how this might vary depending on the geographic areas where children were living. So, overwhelmingly, psychology and mental health research has really focused on youth in urban or suburban areas and there’s still a lot that we don’t know about how those experiences compare to youth in rural settings. Fortunately, there are some studies that do include youth from a wide range of geographic areas, so we can actually explore some of these differences. So, for example, in this study we were looking at data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study, also known as the ABCD Study, which is a large longitudinal study of youth in the United States.
There are nearly 12,000 youth participating in this study, along with their caregivers, across 21 different locations in the United States. Many are in suburban or urban areas, but there’s also a subset of youth who live in more rural areas. And so, this offered a really exciting opportunity to investigate whether risk factors, things like adversity exposure and socioeconomic disadvantage, impacted mental health in different ways across these different contexts, and whether community cohesion was protective.
Yes, so since there has been some evidence that community cohesion is slightly higher in rural communities, I had expected that it might play a stronger protective role for youth relative – for rural youth, relative to urban youth. But we actually don’t see a significant difference in terms of how protective it is. So, the findings here suggest that there may be a protective role of community cohesion, regardless of geographic context. But it’s important to note that we were working with a relatively small sample of rural youth and so, I think it will be important moving forward to see how these findings might replicate in larger rural samples.
Our findings highlight the really critical role that positive social relationships, particularly at the community level, play in supporting youth mental health. So, a lot of existing research has focused on social support, maybe within families or within schools. Our work here really underscores the importance of neighbourhood and community level cohesion and those with social connections. And so, these insights suggest that efforts to strengthen social cohesion, so maybe by fostering trust and mutual support and a sense of belonging within communities, this could all have meaningful mental health benefits for young people.
For schools and community organisations, this could involve creating maybe more inclusive spaces and programmes that promote social engagement, beyond the school environment. And for policymakers, it seems like it may be important to invest in community building initiatives, things like providing safe public spaces and building local networks of support. These could all be powerful strategies for promoting mental health and resilience among youth.
One of the central challenges in this area of research is capturing a comprehensive understanding of youth lived experiences within their physical environments. There are so many different features of the physical environment that might influence youth mental health in distinct and intersecting ways. And accurately measuring and integrating these diverse factors into a single study is methodologically, very complicated and often constrained by the logistics of running a study of that type. But in our research, we specifically focused on geographic context, so examining these differences between rural and urban settings. But at the same time, we recognise that this represents only one dimension of the physical environment and I’m really eager to expand this scope in our future work.
And just to illustrate the importance of taking a really holistic approach, in our study, we examined both risk and protective factors, so specifically socioeconomic disadvantage and community cohesion across rural and urban populations. So, while youth in rural areas, our results show, faced greater socioeconomic disadvantage, they also reported higher levels of community cohesion. And so, without accounting for both types of influences, our understanding of these mental health outcomes would’ve been incomplete and I think that this really underscores the importance of integrating many different types of risk and protective factors into our research.
There are so many open questions right now in this area of research. I think one key question for the field is understanding how different dimensions of the physical environment uniquely impact youth across different developmental stages. So, children and adolescents might respond differently to environmental influences depending on their age, their particular social context and what stage of development they’re in. To disentangle some of these complex relationships we really need more longitudinal research and studies that follow youth over time would allow us to track how different environmental exposures, so maybe things like access to green space, neighbourhood safety, housing quality, community cohesion, how these all are affecting mental health trajectories over time. And this developmental lens is really critical for identifying sensitive periods when environmental interventions may be especially impactful, which will ultimately inform more targeted intervention and prevention strategies.