• Family structure in Ireland and child emotional and behavioral outcomes.

  • What Protected the Wellbeing of Mothers during the Pandemic?

    Introduction The COVID-19 pandemic wrought acute harm to mental wellbeing across the globe; not least through its impact on morbidity and mortality, but also from health anxieties, lockdowns and their economic fallout, the closure of key services, as well as the disruption of social networks. However, while the pandemic’s onset was global, not everyone experienced…

  • LGBT+ Youth Perspectives on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Questions in the Growing Up in Ireland Survey: A Qualitative Study

    The increasing importance of identifying lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT+) populations is a key driver in changes to demographic data collection in representative surveys of youth. While such population-based data are rare, Growing Up in Ireland (GUI), an Irish, government-funded, longitudinal survey, includes sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) measurements. This qualitative study responds…

  • Parental Educational Expectations of Children with Disabilities

  • What do we know about special educational needs? Evidence from Growing Up in Ireland

  • Disproportionality in special education: identifying children with emotional behavioural difficulties in Irish primary schools

    Within categories of special educational needs, emotional and behavioural difficulties have received much attention in recent years, particularly in relation to their definition and identification by parents and teachers. This paper stems from previous research which highlights how children from disadvantaged backgrounds and those attending schools designated as socio-economically disadvantaged are significantly more likely than…

  • Physical activity and emotional-behavioural difficulties in young people: a longitudinal population-based cohort study

    Background There is growing concern around youth mental health. A population health approach to improve mental health must address, among other issues, economic insecurity, access to housing and education, harm reduction from substance use. As a universal public health intervention, increasing physical activity at a population level may have an important role in our approach.…

  • Validity of the ages and stages questionnaire for detecting later below average cognitive function

    The first 1000 days of life are a period of unique sensitivity and plasticity during which critical cognitive abilities are formed. Routine developmental screening tools aim to identify infants who would benefit from early intervention. While these tools have been validated for detecting children with more severe neurodevelopmental disorders, their ability to identify the larger…

  • Emotional behavioural development in children with below average cognitive function

    Children with below average cognitive function represent a substantial yet under-researched population for whom academic and social demands, which increase in complexity year by year, pose significant challenge. Effects on emotional-behavioural development (EBD) are not well understood. The aim of this study was to compare trajectories of EBD for children with and without below average…

  • Longitudinal associations between parental incarceration and children’s emotional and behavioural development: Results from a population cohort study

    Background Parental incarceration (PI) is associated with adverse developmental outcomes for children affected. However, research in this area often reports conflicting results with few studies following children across time in non-U.S. populations. Additionally, more research is called for using multi-informant perspectives rather than relying on adult reports of child outcomes alone. Methods This study used…

  • Teenage parenthood and child externalising and internalising problems: evidence from the ‘Growing Up in Ireland’ study

    Previous research has suggested that the children of teenage parents are at a high risk of developing both internalising and externalising behaviour disorders. The current study aimed to explore pathways through which children of teenage mothers show more externalising and internalising psychopathology than their peers whose parents were older. The present study used data from…

  • Prenatal tobacco exposure and psychiatric outcomes in adolescence: is the effect mediated through birth weight?

    Objective This study aims to examine the associations between prenatal exposure to maternal smoking, birth weight and persistent offspring psychiatric symptoms. Additionally, we aim to examine whether the relationship between prenatal maternal smoking and persistent offspring psychiatric symptoms is mediated by offspring birth weight. Methods This study used the Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) longitudinal…

Cohort ’24

Cohort ’08

Cohort ’98