8 research outputs found
An app-based surveillance system for undergraduate students\u27 mental health during the covid-19 pandemic: Protocol for a prospective cohort study
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic is a public health emergency that poses challenges to the mental health of approximately 1.4 million university students in Canada. Preliminary evidence has shown that the COVID-19 pandemic had a detrimental impact on undergraduate student mental health and well-being; however, existing data are predominantly limited to cross-sectional survey-based studies. Owing to the evolving nature of the pandemic, longer-term prospective surveillance efforts are needed to better anticipate risk and protective factors during a pandemic. Objective: The overarching aim of this study is to use a mobile (primarily smartphone-based) surveillance system to identify risk and protective factors for undergraduate students\u27 mental health. Factors will be identified from weekly self-report data (eg, affect and living accommodation) and device sensor data (eg, physical activity and device usage) to prospectively predict self-reported mental health and service utilization. Methods: Undergraduate students at Western University (London, Ontario, Canada), will be recruited via email to complete an internet-based baseline questionnaire with the option to participate in the study on a weekly basis, using the Student Pandemic Experience (SPE) mobile app for Android/iOS. The app collects sensor samples (eg, GPS coordinates and steps) and self-reported weekly mental health and wellness surveys. Student participants can opt in to link their mobile data with campus-based administrative data capturing health service utilization. Risk and protective factors that predict mental health outcomes are expected to be estimated from (1) cross-sectional associations among students\u27 characteristics (eg, demographics) and key psychosocial factors (eg, affect, stress, and social connection), and behaviors (eg, physical activity and device usage) and (2) longitudinal associations between psychosocial and behavioral factors and campus-based health service utilization. Results: Data collection began November 9, 2020, and will be ongoing through to at least October 31, 2021. Retention from the baseline survey (N=427) to app sign-up was 74% (315/427), with 175-215 (55%-68%) app participants actively responding to weekly surveys. From November 9, 2020, to August 8, 2021, a total of 4851 responses to the app surveys and 25,985 sensor samples (consisting of up to 68 individual data items each; eg, GPS coordinates and steps) were collected from the 315 participants who signed up for the app. Conclusions: The results of this real-world longitudinal cohort study of undergraduate students\u27 mental health based on questionnaires and mobile sensor metrics is expected to show psychosocial and behavioral patterns associated with both positive and negative mental health-related states during pandemic conditions at a relatively large, public, and residential Canadian university campus. The results can be used to support decision-makers and students during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and similar future events. For comparable settings, new interventions (digital or otherwise) might be designed using these findings as an evidence base
Participatory Knowledge of Motion: Ezhianishinaabebimaadiziyaang mii sa ezhianishinaabeaadisokeyaang. The way in which we live, that is the way we write stories.
This is a dissertation based upon the Customary Ways Dataset, which is comprised of 50 interviews given by Elders from Walpole Island First Nation, in 2010. The over-arching, community-designed research question that guided this dissertation was: How do the Elders of Walpole Island describe their relationship to the land? To answer this question, I co-designed a mixed-methods analysis that included traditional methods from the Social Sciences, including Grounded Theory, to establish emergent themes, and some simple statistical analysis using Chi-square and crosstab analysis. I also utilized methods closely related to the Humanities, deploying Story Mapping, Close Reading and a Digital Humanities technique of using Natural Language Processing.
The main contributions of this dissertation are:
1) These are 305 Indigenous Stories, and not 50 interviews. This dissertation demonstrates that Elders were telling stories, and not giving interview answers, as the means by which they describe the ways they engage in a relationship with the land, and how they describe the ethical boundaries of this relationship.
2) Intergenerational knowledge can be shown to be statistically relevant to the complexity of the stories told by Elders within the Customary Ways Dataset.
3) A local description of Indigenous Knowledge emerges: Indigenous Knowledge at Walpole Island is not conceptual, but rather is a participatory knowledge of motion that occurs both through listening to the motion of the land and the act of telling about this motion through stories. Thus, we must begin to recognize stories are both the form of, and the subjects of Indigenous Knowledge.
4) A new definition of listening emerges wherein listening is a process that occurs through land-based participatory activities. This thesis demonstrates that hunting is listening; basket making is listening; gathering medicine is listening; fishing is listening. What is common across all of these forms of listening, is that this type of listening informs the Elder’s relationship with the land, and the stories they tell. Thus, storytelling is listening to the land, which allows the Elders of Walpole Island to practice Ezhi-anishinaabebimaadiziyaang mii sa ezhianishinaabeaadisokeyaang[1]
[1] The way in which we live, that is the way we write (make) stories. I learned this concept from the work of Margaret Noodin, in her work Megwa Baabaamiiaayaayaang Dibaajomoyaang (Anishinaabe Literature as Memory in Motion, p.183, 2014)
Toward a new 'republic': the visionary practice of urban planning
Bibliography: p. 68-71Missing the partial copyright licence form
The Research Office and the Research Library: A Holistic Approach to the Research Cycle
There is growing external pressure from funding agencies (the tricouncil of Canada), multi-levels of governance (provincial and federal funding), and communities of practice (clinicians, advocacy groups, industry) that has begun to reframe, for Universities, and researchers, how research is written and thought about in the broader context of Knowledge Mobilization/Translation
At the same time, Universities and researchers are under increasing pressure to evaluate the impact of the research they produce, and how this research has been taken up by their identified partners.
Working together, Research Western and Western Libraries are undertaking a holistic approach to account for the entirety of the research cycle and to improve the knowledge exchange, preservation, and dissemination of our researchers’ outputs, defining knowledge stewardship for our institution
Knowledge exchange
In this column the authors describe a conscious partnership between the university research administration office and the academic library, laying out the rationale for such cooperation and describing the benefits to their respective departments and to their stakeholders more broadly
An app-based ecological momentary assessment of undergraduate student mental Health during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada (Smart Healthy Campus Version 2.0): Longitudinal study.
This paper presents results from the Smart Healthy Campus 2.0 study/smartphone app, developed and used to collect mental health-related lifestyle data from 86 Canadian undergraduates January-August 2021. Objectives of the study were to 1) address the absence of longitudinal mental health overview and lifestyle-related data from Canadian undergraduate students, and 2) to identify associations between these self-reported mental health overviews (questionnaires) and lifestyle-related measures (from smartphone digital measures). This was a longitudinal repeat measures study conducted over 40 weeks. A 9-item mental health questionnaire was accessible once daily in the app. Two variants of this mental health questionnaire existed; the first was a weekly variant, available each Monday or until a participant responded during the week. The second was a daily variant available after the weekly variant. 6518 digital measure samples and 1722 questionnaire responses were collected. Mixed models were fit for responses to the two questionnaire variants and 12 phone digital measures (e.g. GPS, step counts). The daily questionnaire had positive associations with floors walked, installed apps, and campus proximity, while having negative associations with uptime, and daily calendar events. Daily depression had a positive association with uptime. Daily resilience appeared to have a slight positive association with campus proximity. The weekly questionnaire variant had positive associations with device idling and installed apps, and negative associations with floors walked, calendar events, and campus proximity. Physical activity, weekly, had a negative association with uptime, and a positive association with calendar events and device idling. These lifestyle indicators that associated with student mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic suggest directions for new mental health-related interventions (digital or otherwise) and further efforts in mental health surveillance under comparable circumstances