Logo image
Addressing international research challenges in child and adolescent mental health during global crises: experience and recommendations of the Co-SPACE international consortium
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Addressing international research challenges in child and adolescent mental health during global crises: experience and recommendations of the Co-SPACE international consortium

Jennifer McMahon, Sonja March, Martha Oakes, Wendy K. Silverman, Cathy Creswell, Arlen Rowe, Mohsen Rajabi and Simona Skripkauskaite
Child and adolescent psychiatry and mental health, Vol.19(1), pp.62-11
29/05/2025
PMID: 40442826

Abstract

Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Clinical Psychology Forensic Psychiatry Medicine Medicine & Public Health Pediatrics Psychiatry
During the most recent global crisis due to COVID-19 pandemic, mental health researchers globally were tasked with carrying out high-quality and responsive research to understand the changes and long-term trajectories in young people’s mental health symptoms. Comparative international longitudinal research has been recommended as a particularly promising avenue to understand pandemic impacts and facilitate global solutions. The Co-SPACE International Consortium comprises researchers from 14 sites who aimed to compare findings on the impact of the pandemic on young people and family mental health. This paper describes the process and challenges associated with the Consortium’s efforts to combine country-level data to produce global insights for research and clinical practice for the past three years. Several key challenges were identified, particularly about the conduct of international comparative research. These challenges concerned funding, ethics review, data sharing, variations in cultural and local contexts, lack of cross-culturally comparable or meaningful measures, research design, and dissemination. After considering these challenges, we provide a range of recommendations that provide a blueprint for the gathering of timely and robust evidence, the identification of global trends, the mobilisation of resources, and effective support to children and families in public health crises.
url
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13034-025-00918-0View
Published (Version of record) Open

Metrics

Details

Logo image

Usage Policy