I recently attended the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS7) Age 17 Survey: Consultative one day conference held at UCL’s Institute of Education in London. Cohort studies are extremely valuable because data is collected over time working with the same sample of people. Longitudinal studies permit to describe the natural history of the same population and can identify risk factors for example, for optimal health, educational attainment chances and/or employment opportunities. Professor Emla Fitzsimons is the Principal Investigator of MCS,m strategically invited leaders of the ‘Activities and Daily Life’, ‘Cognitive Development’, and the ‘Socio-Emotional Development’ to harness conference delegates’ view on what are the important and key issues that society should know when examining 17 year old adolescents’ lives. The leaders provided an overview of their current strategies for capturing participants’ unique style of life. Then through a series of workshops the pros and cons of these were discussed and summarised. I don’t envy their jobs! To study the individual characteristics and the associated environmental factors in such a large sample is a huge undertaking. The attendees were from very varied inter- and multi-disciplinary backgrounds working at a wide range of organisations, including government agencies. The common objective was to create a dataset that can inform many governmental policies on a variety of topics. The process of decision making over every aspects of the 7th sweep of the MCS is extremely complex. The key aspect of longitudinal studies is comparability. Although, each sweep is unique because of the cohort is ageing, there has to be a trend of using the same methodology overtime. Studies like the MCS are facing constant funding crises because they are very expensive to run. There is an ongoing revision of time taken to collect data, finding proxy to gold standard measures and considering cutting expensive data collection methods like, FMRI scans, use of accelerometers to assess physical activity patterns and conducting physical tests. Despite all of these difficulties, data from such studies are invaluable. For example, in the 7th sweep they want to omit interviewing parents about their child’s mental health. I argued to include this data at this sweep, as most adolescents in the study are still living at home and others (like family members) are the ones most likely to identify early signs of mental health problems. Early detection is vital, especially when 1 in 10 adolescents known to develop at least one serious depressive episode in the UK by the time they are 18. Check out the MCS website if you are interested. You can also access all speakers’ slides by following the link (http://www.cls.ioe.ac.uk/Conference.aspx?itemid=4285&itemTitle=MCS+Consultative+Conference&sitesectionid=28&sitesectiontitle=Events). Data from the previous 6 sweeps are available for researchers to interrogate.
BU staff can login below:
Don’t miss a post!
Subscribe for the BU Research Digest, delivered freshly every day.
Recent posts
BU research Funding opportunities EU
- New weight change BU paperNovember 21, 2024
- One week to go! | The 16th Annual Postgraduate Research ConferenceNovember 20, 2024
- Academic Conferences Engagement: ISBE 2024November 20, 2024
- Geography and Environmental Studies academics – would you like to get more involved in preparing our next REF submission?November 20, 2024
- Congratulations to three former BU staffNovember 20, 2024
- Last chance to book!November 19, 2024
- MSCA Staff Exchanges 2024 Call – internal deadlineNovember 21, 2024
- The Leverhulme Trust Visit to BU, 4th December now open for bookings-November 12, 2024
- Applications are now open for 2025 ESRC Postdoctoral Fellowships!November 7, 2024
- New Generation thinkers 2025 – call now open – AHRC and BBC Radio4October 28, 2024
- BU Innovation Funding (HEIF) 2024-25 Open Call for ApplicationsOctober 25, 2024
- Horizon Europe – ERC CoG and MSCA SE webinarsSeptember 30, 2024
- MSCA Staff Exchanges 2024 Call – internal deadlineNovember 21, 2024
- Horizon Europe – ERC CoG and MSCA SE webinarsSeptember 30, 2024
- MaGMap: Mass Grave MappingSeptember 4, 2024
- ERC grants – series of webinarsAugust 6, 2024
- Last reminder – MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowships 2024 internal deadline next weekJuly 11, 2024
- Free Research Event – Wednesday 26th June – A Celebration of Sustainable Food Related ResearchJune 24, 2024
Search by Category
Search by popular post topics
AHRC
Brexit
BRIAN
BU research
clinical research
CMMPH
collaboration
collaborative research
conference
congratulations
Dr. Pramod Regmi
Edwin-blog-post
ESRC
EU
event
Events
funding
funding opportunities
Fusion
Fusion Investment Fund
Health
horizon 2020
HSC
impact
innovation
knowledge exchange
media
midwifery
Nepal
nhs
NIHR
open access
Prof. Edwin van Teijlingen
publication
public engagement
publishing
ref
research
Research Councils
research professional
RKE development framework
RKEDF
social sciences
training
widening participation
Research Information Network
- Physical Sciences Case studies: information use and discovery
- Information handling in collaborative research: an exploration of five case studies
- Information literacy monitoring and evaluation
- Data centres: their use, value and impact
- Heading for the open road: costs and benefits of transitions in scholarly communications