What is it about?
My research area of interest is Adolescent Mental Health, specifically in the area of depressive symptoms and the variables leading to depression in adolescents. This study explored perceived stress, bullying, and salivary cortisol samples in a small 9th grade population (30 students). As a nurse, it is important understand these mental health issues because of suicide being the #2 cause of death in this population. The other issue facing adolescents is hormonal changes, daily stress from school, social exclusion, bullying, difficult home situations, and academic achievement. I used a theorist, Bruce McEwen's theory of Allostatic Load as it seems to compliment my study as it relates to stress and how it affects the physical and mental status of an individual at any age. The important key to working with an adolescent population is to have a great support system in the school setting, make the study something that the adolescents are interested in and can relate to, and provide them with a small incentive to participate. I used a gift card to a local smoothie shop. The school nurse was my biggest supporter along with a teacher.
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Why is it important?
Adolescence is a time that is critical for adults to understand what is happening in the brain at this tumultuous age. My work filled a gap in that there was very little biological research seen in the literature that was conducted in a school setting. I learned that although the study was feasible in this setting, I needed to have more cortisol samples at more times during the day to make the study more representative of what is going on over the course of a day in an adolescents life. Having an adolescent collect their own samples in the night before coming to school and then the morning of the study before school began would have provided a better picture of the diurnal rhythm of cortisol. Each day we see news of horrible tragedies happening in school settings. It is important to do research as to the trajectories that lead up to issues such as depressive symptoms in this age group. I would ultimately love to see more screenings of depression, anxiety, bullying, and mental health problems in schools as well as on-site treatment for these issues.
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This page is a summary of: Relationships Among Perceived Stress, Bullying, Cortisol, and Depressive Symptoms in Ninth-Grade Adolescents, Biological Research For Nursing, January 2017, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/1099800416656396.
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