Implications of Canadian youth views for measuring youth mental health from a socio-economic perspective

Author:

Laliberte Shari1,Varcoe Colleen2

Affiliation:

1. School of Health Sciences, Vancouver Community College, 1155 East Broadway, Vancouver, B.C., Canada V5T 4V5

2. School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, T153 2211, Westbrook Mall, Vancouver, B.C., Canada V6T 2B5

Abstract

Abstract Developing meaningful indicators to track youth mental health (MH) is important to support the development and evaluation of responsive mental health promotion (MHP) initiatives that address the socio-economic determinants of youth MH. Development of relevant indicators is challenged, however, by the lack of knowledge regarding the relations among socio-economic factors and youth MH. Thirty diverse young people from a Canadian metropolitan area were engaged within a process of social praxis to explore their experiences of the inter-relationship between their socio-economic environments and their MH and their processes of seeking to realize their MH. Participants emphasized ‘needs’ as foundational to MH, whereas ‘wants’, driven by materialistic and wealth-oriented values and social norms, constrained their MH. Their reflections on the inter-relations among their MH and socio-economic processes highlight eight inter-related MH needs within the Canadian socio-economic context. In this paper, we present these needs and show how these needs, young people’s affective states, and their access to resources within co-evolving socio-economic processes (to enable their needs) illustrate the fundamental inter-relation between young people’s MH and socio-economic processes. We identify implications for measuring youth MH within MHP practice, including the importance of iterative indicator frameworks that include measures of young people’s access to resources to enable their MH needs and their degree of distress.

Funder

Lyle Creelman Endowment Fund

University of British Columbia

School of Nursing grant

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Doctoral Research Award

Wil Evon McCreery Memorial Prize Research Award

Irene Goldstone HIV/AIDS and Social Justice Graduate Scholarship

UBC Four Year Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health(social science)

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