Public Health Nursing , 01/01/2022

Early findings of a nurse-led youth activist program in mind caring

Saifon Aekwarangkoon, Jessica LeClair, Linda Denise Oakley

Abstract

Background: : School-based youth activist programs in mind caring have been shown to support the mental health and learning needs of adolescent students. Methods: : We used collaborative action research methods to implement a nurse-led mind caring youth activist program for a rural, extended opportunity school in Thailand. The participants (N = 67) were the public health nurse assigned to the school, students willing to become youth activists (n = 42), school teachers and staff (n = 7), university psychiatric mental health nursing faculty (n = 2), and volunteer nursing students (n = 16). Qualitative thematic analyses methods were used to explore the transcripts of the participant's reflection circles and confirmatory interviews for evidence of effective program implementation. Results: : Major themes of change and growth were identified. Youth activists students said mind caring improved their mental health. Teachers described having a more positive attitude towards students’ mental health and learning needs. Nursing students found optimistic confidence and self-awareness in the hands-on experience with the complex role responsibilities in public health nursing. Conclusion: : These results provide early evidence of stakeholder satisfaction with the implementation of a school-based youth activist program as collaborative action for organizational change.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

collaborative action researchmental healthmind caringscreeningstigma

ASJC Subject Area

Nursing : Nursing (all)Medicine : Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Funding Agency

Thai Health Promotion Foundation


Bibliography


Aekwarangkoon, S., LeClair, J., & Oakley, L. (2022). Early findings of a nurse-led youth activist program in mind caring. Public Health Nursingdoi:10.1111/phn.13078

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