BACKGROUND: Children and adolescents with mental health problems are widely reported to have problems with peer relationships; however, few studies have explored the way in which these children are re
Research gap analysis derived from 3 psychology papers in our local library.
The gap
BACKGROUND: Children and adolescents with mental health problems are widely reported to have problems with peer relationships; however, few studies have explored the way in which these children are regarded by their peers.
Consensus across the literature
Clustered from 3 gap mentions across 3 papers via embedding cosine ≥ 0.62.
Research trend
Established — well-defined area with open sub-problems.
Supporting evidence — 3 representative gaps
- Promoting or suppressing resilience to mental health outcomes in at risk young people: The role of parental and peer attachment and school connectedness (2018) · doi
School connectedness may provide a role in promoting resilience for mental health for adolescents living in risk, whereas the potential negative influence that secure attachments to peers exerts, in context of poor parental attachment, needs to be explored further.
Keywords: school connectedness provide role promoting resilience mental health adolescents living risk potential negative influence secure - Explicit and implicit stigma towards peers with mental health problems in childhood and adolescence (2012) · doi
BACKGROUND: Children and adolescents with mental health problems are widely reported to have problems with peer relationships; however, few studies have explored the way in which these children are regarded by their peers.
Keywords: children problems background adolescents mental health widely reported peer relationships explored regarded peers - Social Connectedness, Self-Efficacy, and Mental Health Outcomes Among Homeless Youth (2016) · doi
Although prior research has established that both social connectedness and self-efficacy buffer vulnerable youth’s adverse health outcomes, few studies have compared the potential of these protective factors on homeless youth’s mental well-being.
Keywords: youth prior established social connectedness self efficacy buffer vulnerable adverse health outcomes compared potential protective
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