University of Leicester
Browse

Multisystemic resilience and its impact on youth mental health: reflections on co-designing a multi-disciplinary, participatory study

Download (83.99 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-25, 11:45 authored by Linda Theron, Matteo Bergamini, Cassey Chambers, Karmel Choi, Olufunmilayo I Fawole, Fyneface Dumnamene Fyneface, Jan Höltge, Thandi Kapwata, Diane LevineDiane Levine, Zainab Mai Bornu, Makananelo Makape, Celeste Matross, Brian McGrath, Olanrewaju Olaniyan, Dov J Stekel, Josh Vande Hey, Caradee Y Wright, Ameh Abba Zion, Michael Ungar
Youth depression is a global emergency. Redressing this emergency requires a sophisticated understanding of the multisystemic risks and biopsychosocial, economic, and environmental resources associated with young people's experiences of no/limited versus severe depression. Too often, however, personal risks and a focus on individual-level protective resources dominate accounts of young people's trajectories towards depression. Further, studies of depression in high-income countries (i.e., “western”) typically inform these accounts. This article corrects these oversights. It reports on the methodology of the Wellcome-funded R-NEET study: a multidisciplinary, multisystemic, mixed method longitudinal study of resilience among African youth whose status as “not in education, employment or training” (NEET) makes them disproportionately vulnerable to depression. Co-designed by academics, community-based service providers and youth in South Africa and Nigeria, with partnerships in the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States, the R-NEET study is identifying the physiological, psychological, social, economic, institutional, and environmental risks and resources associated with distinct trajectories of depression. Using the methodology of the R-NEET study as exemplar, this article advances an argument for understanding resilience as a contextually and culturally rooted capacity that draws on the multiple, co-occurring systems that young people depend upon to support their wellbeing. Acknowledging and harnessing the multiple systems implicated in resilience is critical to researchers and mental health providers who seek to support young people to thrive, and to young people themselves when protecting or promoting their mental wellbeing.

Funding

Protecting African youth who are NEET against depression: An investigation of differentially impactful, multisystemic resilience-enablers

Wellcome Trust

Find out more...

History

Author affiliation

College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities Criminology, Sociology & Social Policy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Frontiers in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

Volume

4

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

eissn

2813-4540

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-03-25

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Diane Levine

Deposit date

2025-03-21

Data Access Statement

The article reports a novel methodology, it reports no data. The data that this methodology will generate are not reported in this article. When the R-NEET study is complete, the data will be made publicly available via Figshare.

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC