3,138,951 research outputs found
Youth e-mental health in Scotland : challenges and opportunities
One in ten UK youth have mental health issues (Watson & Douglas, 2012), and girls may be at higher risk than boys (Levin, Currie, & Muldoon, 2009). Predictors of mental health issues and emotional distress have been identified in area youth, such as material deprivation, lack of emotional support from parents, family issues, and lower education (Bjarnason & Sigurdardottir, 2003; Sweeting, West, Young, & Der, 2010). The UK has prioritised mental health reform (Department of Health, 2014). National resources such as See Me, a site devoted to decreasing mental health stigma (https://www.seemescotland.org/young-people/) and ChildLine, a phone and online help line for youth (http://www.childline.org.uk), are making noteworthy attempts at connecting young people in the UK with engaging and useful mental health information. Much work remains to be done in order to connect youth with the mental health resources and information they need. The authorâs prior research has demonstrated that differences exist between what young people search for, find, and prefer to interact with online, and sources that clinicians would consider authoritative sources. She has also found that low levels of information literacy and health literacy, unengaging information presentation such as dense text, and a mismatch between lay language and clinical language decreases the chances that youth will find the mental health information they need (Neal, Campbell, Williams, Lu, & Nussbaumer, 2011; Rasmussen Pennington, Richardson, Garinger, & Contursi, 2013). This paper will provide an overview of the authorâs past work in this area. It will also present her plans for future research into the online mental health information needs and information seeking behaviours of Scottish youth ages 16-25
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Young people and political (in)activism: why don't young people vote?
Continued experimentation with methods to make the process of voting easier signals a growing concern amongst politicians that the public is becoming increasingly disaffected from politics in Britain. However, these government initiatives may be failing to tackle the real problemâthat the electorate appear to find the business of politics uninviting and irrelevant. In this article we examine the results from a nationwide survey of over 700 young people, and find that this generation, whilst supportive of these new electoral methods, are unlikely to be persuaded to turnout to vote while they continue to feel marginalised from the political process
Young People and News
Presents survey findings on the daily news consumption of young Americans compared with that of older adults -- the sources, medium, frequency, depth, and selectivity of news exposure. Discusses issues of defining news consumption and implications
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