Repeated Psychosocial Screening of High School Students Using YouthCHAT: Cohort Study

BackgroundPsychosocial problems are common during adolescence and can have long-lasting effects on health and on academic and social functioning. YouthCHAT, an electronic HEEADSSS (home, education, eating, activities, drugs and alcohol, suicide and depression, sexuality and s...

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Main Authors: Thabrew, Hiran, Kumar, Harshali, Goldfinch, Mary, Cavadino, Alana, Goodyear-Smith, Felicity
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-10-01
Series:JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
Online Access:http://pediatrics.jmir.org/2020/2/e20976/
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spelling doaj-627c86930166434392cd956be6bc14ac2021-04-02T19:21:20ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Pediatrics and Parenting2561-67222020-10-0132e2097610.2196/20976Repeated Psychosocial Screening of High School Students Using YouthCHAT: Cohort StudyThabrew, HiranKumar, HarshaliGoldfinch, MaryCavadino, AlanaGoodyear-Smith, Felicity BackgroundPsychosocial problems are common during adolescence and can have long-lasting effects on health and on academic and social functioning. YouthCHAT, an electronic HEEADSSS (home, education, eating, activities, drugs and alcohol, suicide and depression, sexuality and safety)-aligned instrument, has recently been demonstrated to be an acceptable and effective school-based psychosocial screener for 13-year-old (Year 9) high school students. ObjectiveThis study aims to compare acceptability and detection rates with repeated YouthCHAT screenings of high school students when they are 13 years old (Year 9) and 14 years old (Year 10). MethodsWe invited all Year-10 students to complete a YouthCHAT screening in 2018. Rates of positively identified issues were compared between the subset of students screened in both 2017 and 2018. Student acceptability toward YouthCHAT was investigated through focus group sessions. Onward clinical referral rates in 2018 were also investigated to explore the potential referral burden following screening. Data analysis for rates of positively identified issues were conducted with the McNemar test. Chi-square, Fisher exact test, and Kruskal-Wallis test were used to analyze the focus group data. ResultsOf 141 eligible Year-10 students, 114 (81%) completed a YouthCHAT screening during 2018, and 97 (85%) of them completed it for a second time. Apart from depression, which increased (P=.002), and perceived life stress, which decreased (P=.04), rates of identified issues were broadly similar between 13 and 14 years of age. Repeated screenings via YouthCHAT was acceptable to students and time-efficient (mean, 6 minutes and 32 seconds) but did not reduce the overall number of individuals with identified issues. Onward clinical referrals from positive screens were mostly managed by school-based health services without the need for external referrals. ConclusionsAlthough further evaluation is needed, our results support the value of YouthCHAT as an acceptable and effective instrument with which to achieve routine identification of psychosocial issues and early intervention within a high school environment.http://pediatrics.jmir.org/2020/2/e20976/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thabrew, Hiran
Kumar, Harshali
Goldfinch, Mary
Cavadino, Alana
Goodyear-Smith, Felicity
spellingShingle Thabrew, Hiran
Kumar, Harshali
Goldfinch, Mary
Cavadino, Alana
Goodyear-Smith, Felicity
Repeated Psychosocial Screening of High School Students Using YouthCHAT: Cohort Study
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
author_facet Thabrew, Hiran
Kumar, Harshali
Goldfinch, Mary
Cavadino, Alana
Goodyear-Smith, Felicity
author_sort Thabrew, Hiran
title Repeated Psychosocial Screening of High School Students Using YouthCHAT: Cohort Study
title_short Repeated Psychosocial Screening of High School Students Using YouthCHAT: Cohort Study
title_full Repeated Psychosocial Screening of High School Students Using YouthCHAT: Cohort Study
title_fullStr Repeated Psychosocial Screening of High School Students Using YouthCHAT: Cohort Study
title_full_unstemmed Repeated Psychosocial Screening of High School Students Using YouthCHAT: Cohort Study
title_sort repeated psychosocial screening of high school students using youthchat: cohort study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
issn 2561-6722
publishDate 2020-10-01
description BackgroundPsychosocial problems are common during adolescence and can have long-lasting effects on health and on academic and social functioning. YouthCHAT, an electronic HEEADSSS (home, education, eating, activities, drugs and alcohol, suicide and depression, sexuality and safety)-aligned instrument, has recently been demonstrated to be an acceptable and effective school-based psychosocial screener for 13-year-old (Year 9) high school students. ObjectiveThis study aims to compare acceptability and detection rates with repeated YouthCHAT screenings of high school students when they are 13 years old (Year 9) and 14 years old (Year 10). MethodsWe invited all Year-10 students to complete a YouthCHAT screening in 2018. Rates of positively identified issues were compared between the subset of students screened in both 2017 and 2018. Student acceptability toward YouthCHAT was investigated through focus group sessions. Onward clinical referral rates in 2018 were also investigated to explore the potential referral burden following screening. Data analysis for rates of positively identified issues were conducted with the McNemar test. Chi-square, Fisher exact test, and Kruskal-Wallis test were used to analyze the focus group data. ResultsOf 141 eligible Year-10 students, 114 (81%) completed a YouthCHAT screening during 2018, and 97 (85%) of them completed it for a second time. Apart from depression, which increased (P=.002), and perceived life stress, which decreased (P=.04), rates of identified issues were broadly similar between 13 and 14 years of age. Repeated screenings via YouthCHAT was acceptable to students and time-efficient (mean, 6 minutes and 32 seconds) but did not reduce the overall number of individuals with identified issues. Onward clinical referrals from positive screens were mostly managed by school-based health services without the need for external referrals. ConclusionsAlthough further evaluation is needed, our results support the value of YouthCHAT as an acceptable and effective instrument with which to achieve routine identification of psychosocial issues and early intervention within a high school environment.
url http://pediatrics.jmir.org/2020/2/e20976/
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