What’s new with the Catalogue?
Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2025 8:07 am
Google analytics indicate that the Catalogue reaches countries across the world with users in the USA, Finland, and Canada, to name a few. This shows that the Catalogue is a valuable tool for mental health researchers across the globe, giving the opportunity for existing measures to be discovered globally and continuously.
51 studies – and counting!
The Catalogue now compiles details of mental vietnam rcs data health topics and related measures from 51 ongoing longitudinal studies. Altogether the studies cover a variety of aims and objectives, allowing the Catalogue to bring together information about a wide range of data.
The Catalogue covers multiple study designs, including twin studies, household panel surveys, accelerated cohort studies and repeated cross-sectional designs. This variation allows users to discover a variety of mental health data across different kinds of longitudinal cohorts.
Updated Covid-19 data
Information about mental health measures collected during the Covid-19 pandemic is available on the Catalogue. It is timely for research to further investigate the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on mental health and wellbeing in the population and among vulnerable groups. With the proportion of UK adults meeting the diagnostic criteria for depression rising from 10% to 21% between March 2020 and 2021 (ONS Opinions and Lifestyle Survey – Coronavirus and depression in adults, Great Britain. January – March 2021), it is important to understand why and how this increase has occurred, and how the effects can be minimised.
51 studies – and counting!
The Catalogue now compiles details of mental vietnam rcs data health topics and related measures from 51 ongoing longitudinal studies. Altogether the studies cover a variety of aims and objectives, allowing the Catalogue to bring together information about a wide range of data.
The Catalogue covers multiple study designs, including twin studies, household panel surveys, accelerated cohort studies and repeated cross-sectional designs. This variation allows users to discover a variety of mental health data across different kinds of longitudinal cohorts.
Updated Covid-19 data
Information about mental health measures collected during the Covid-19 pandemic is available on the Catalogue. It is timely for research to further investigate the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on mental health and wellbeing in the population and among vulnerable groups. With the proportion of UK adults meeting the diagnostic criteria for depression rising from 10% to 21% between March 2020 and 2021 (ONS Opinions and Lifestyle Survey – Coronavirus and depression in adults, Great Britain. January – March 2021), it is important to understand why and how this increase has occurred, and how the effects can be minimised.