Decoding Teenagers’ Response to Pandemic Stress through Brain Scans

Decoding Teenagers’ Response to Pandemic Stress through Brain Scans




WASHINGTON — Brain scans could⁢ be used to predict how teenagers’ mental health will fare during a stressful time, an analysis that spanned the COVID-19 pandemic suggests.
For a lot of​ research, “the​ study happens, and you report on the results, and that’s ⁢about it,” says Margot Wagner, a bioengineer at the University ​of California, San Diego who was not ​involved in the new work. But this‍ research followed hundreds of teenagers over time, ⁤a​ study design that “means you ​can intervene and help way sooner than otherwise,” Wagner says.
The pandemic was particularly tough for many teenagers, as isolation, worry and upheaval of daily​ routines affected them in ways that scientists are just now starting to see (SN: 1/3/23). A record number‌ of young people are struggling with‍ depression and anxiety, ​a​ mental health⁢ crisis that some scientists are calling “the second⁣ pandemic” ⁤(SN: 6/30/23).
While many teenagers struggled during the pandemic, others did OK. Computational neuroscientist Caterina Stamoulis ⁣of Harvard⁣ Medical School and Boston Children’s Hospital⁣ investigated why responses differed using data collected as part of the Adolescent Brain ‍Cognitive Development, or ABCD, study. That larger study — involving scientists at 21 research sites‌ across the ⁢United States — aims to figure out how teenagers’ brains grow over the years.

2023-11-15⁤ 07:00:00
Article‌ from www.sciencenews.org
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