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Understanding How School-Based Interventions Can Tackle LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health Inequality: A Realist Approach

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Understanding How School-Based Interventions Can Tackle LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health Inequality: A Realist Approach. / McDermott, Elizabeth; Kaley, Alex; Kaner, Eileen et al.
In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol. 20, No. 5, 4274, 28.02.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

McDermott, E, Kaley, A, Kaner, E, Limmer, M, McGovern, R, McNulty, F, Nelson, R, Geijer-Simpson, E & Spencer, L 2023, 'Understanding How School-Based Interventions Can Tackle LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health Inequality: A Realist Approach', International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, vol. 20, no. 5, 4274. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20054274

APA

McDermott, E., Kaley, A., Kaner, E., Limmer, M., McGovern, R., McNulty, F., Nelson, R., Geijer-Simpson, E., & Spencer, L. (2023). Understanding How School-Based Interventions Can Tackle LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health Inequality: A Realist Approach. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(5), Article 4274. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20054274

Vancouver

McDermott E, Kaley A, Kaner E, Limmer M, McGovern R, McNulty F et al. Understanding How School-Based Interventions Can Tackle LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health Inequality: A Realist Approach. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023 Feb 28;20(5):4274. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20054274

Author

McDermott, Elizabeth ; Kaley, Alex ; Kaner, Eileen et al. / Understanding How School-Based Interventions Can Tackle LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health Inequality : A Realist Approach. In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023 ; Vol. 20, No. 5.

Bibtex

@article{e3d6dc6a6d814c5a8a32ee42559d2204,
title = "Understanding How School-Based Interventions Can Tackle LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health Inequality: A Realist Approach",
abstract = "Globally, research indicates that LGBTQ+ young people have elevated rates of poor mental health in comparison with their cisgender heterosexual peers. The school environment is a major risk factor and is consistently associated with negative mental health outcomes for LGBTQ+ young people. The aim of this UK study was to develop a programme theory that explained how, why, for whom, and in what context school-based interventions prevent or reduce mental health problems in LGBTQ+ young people, through participation with key stakeholders. Online realist interviews were conducted in the UK with (1) LGBTQ+ young people aged between 13–18 years attending secondary schools (N = 10); (2) intervention practitioners (N = 9); and (3) school staff (N = 3). A realist retroductive data analysis strategy was employed to identify causal pathways across different interventions that improved mental health outcomes. The programme theory we produced explains how school-based interventions that directly tackle dominant cisgender and heterosexual norms can improve LGBTQ+ pupils{\textquoteright} mental health. We found that context factors such as a {\textquoteleft}whole-school approach{\textquoteright} and {\textquoteleft}collaborative leadership{\textquoteright} were crucial to the delivery of successful interventions. Our theory posits three causal pathways that might improve mental health: (1) interventions that promote LGBTQ+ visibility and facilitate usualising, school belonging, and recognition; (2) interventions for talking and support that develop safety and coping; and (3) interventions that address institutional school culture (staff training and inclusion polices) that foster school belonging, empowerment, recognition, and safety. Our theoretical model suggests that providing a school environment that affirms and usualises LGBTQ+ identities and promotes school safety and belonging can improve mental health outcomes for LGBTQ+ pupils.",
keywords = "Article, mental health, LGBTQ+ youth, adolescence, sexual/gender minority",
author = "Elizabeth McDermott and Alex Kaley and Eileen Kaner and Mark Limmer and Ruth McGovern and Felix McNulty and Rosie Nelson and Emma Geijer-Simpson and Liam Spencer",
year = "2023",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.3390/ijerph20054274",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
journal = "International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health",
issn = "1660-4601",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding How School-Based Interventions Can Tackle LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health Inequality

T2 - A Realist Approach

AU - McDermott, Elizabeth

AU - Kaley, Alex

AU - Kaner, Eileen

AU - Limmer, Mark

AU - McGovern, Ruth

AU - McNulty, Felix

AU - Nelson, Rosie

AU - Geijer-Simpson, Emma

AU - Spencer, Liam

PY - 2023/2/28

Y1 - 2023/2/28

N2 - Globally, research indicates that LGBTQ+ young people have elevated rates of poor mental health in comparison with their cisgender heterosexual peers. The school environment is a major risk factor and is consistently associated with negative mental health outcomes for LGBTQ+ young people. The aim of this UK study was to develop a programme theory that explained how, why, for whom, and in what context school-based interventions prevent or reduce mental health problems in LGBTQ+ young people, through participation with key stakeholders. Online realist interviews were conducted in the UK with (1) LGBTQ+ young people aged between 13–18 years attending secondary schools (N = 10); (2) intervention practitioners (N = 9); and (3) school staff (N = 3). A realist retroductive data analysis strategy was employed to identify causal pathways across different interventions that improved mental health outcomes. The programme theory we produced explains how school-based interventions that directly tackle dominant cisgender and heterosexual norms can improve LGBTQ+ pupils’ mental health. We found that context factors such as a ‘whole-school approach’ and ‘collaborative leadership’ were crucial to the delivery of successful interventions. Our theory posits three causal pathways that might improve mental health: (1) interventions that promote LGBTQ+ visibility and facilitate usualising, school belonging, and recognition; (2) interventions for talking and support that develop safety and coping; and (3) interventions that address institutional school culture (staff training and inclusion polices) that foster school belonging, empowerment, recognition, and safety. Our theoretical model suggests that providing a school environment that affirms and usualises LGBTQ+ identities and promotes school safety and belonging can improve mental health outcomes for LGBTQ+ pupils.

AB - Globally, research indicates that LGBTQ+ young people have elevated rates of poor mental health in comparison with their cisgender heterosexual peers. The school environment is a major risk factor and is consistently associated with negative mental health outcomes for LGBTQ+ young people. The aim of this UK study was to develop a programme theory that explained how, why, for whom, and in what context school-based interventions prevent or reduce mental health problems in LGBTQ+ young people, through participation with key stakeholders. Online realist interviews were conducted in the UK with (1) LGBTQ+ young people aged between 13–18 years attending secondary schools (N = 10); (2) intervention practitioners (N = 9); and (3) school staff (N = 3). A realist retroductive data analysis strategy was employed to identify causal pathways across different interventions that improved mental health outcomes. The programme theory we produced explains how school-based interventions that directly tackle dominant cisgender and heterosexual norms can improve LGBTQ+ pupils’ mental health. We found that context factors such as a ‘whole-school approach’ and ‘collaborative leadership’ were crucial to the delivery of successful interventions. Our theory posits three causal pathways that might improve mental health: (1) interventions that promote LGBTQ+ visibility and facilitate usualising, school belonging, and recognition; (2) interventions for talking and support that develop safety and coping; and (3) interventions that address institutional school culture (staff training and inclusion polices) that foster school belonging, empowerment, recognition, and safety. Our theoretical model suggests that providing a school environment that affirms and usualises LGBTQ+ identities and promotes school safety and belonging can improve mental health outcomes for LGBTQ+ pupils.

KW - Article

KW - mental health

KW - LGBTQ+ youth

KW - adolescence

KW - sexual/gender minority

U2 - 10.3390/ijerph20054274

DO - 10.3390/ijerph20054274

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

JO - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

JF - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

SN - 1660-4601

IS - 5

M1 - 4274

ER -