TY - JOUR
T1 - Research protocol for BootStRaP assessment phase
T2 - A nine-nation study on boosting societal adaptation and mental health in a rapidly digitalising, post-pandemic Europe
AU - Fineberg, Naomi A.
AU - Brandtner, Annika
AU - Löchner, Nana
AU - Kannen, Christopher
AU - Smith, Megan
AU - Foster, Simon
AU - Meinke, Anita
AU - Mosler, Kristin
AU - Fine, Shai
AU - Carmi, Lior
AU - Friedman, Talia
AU - Demetrovics, Zsolt
AU - Sales, Célia
AU - Jones, Julia
AU - Oliveira, Hernâni
AU - Chamberlain, Samuel R.
AU - Ioannidis, Konstantinos
AU - Felvinczi, Katalin
AU - Zohar, Joseph
AU - Roman-Urrestarazu, Andres
AU - Susi, Mart
AU - Burkauskas, Julius
AU - Lindenberg, Katajun
AU - Neumann, Ina
AU - Huizink, Anja
AU - Moreno, Carmen
AU - Corazza, Ornella
AU - Dias, Teresa Silva
AU - Mohler-Kuo, Meichun
AU - Purper-Ouakil, Diane
AU - Fongaro, Erica
AU - Fally, Sara
AU - Pallanti, Stefano
AU - Morgan, Nicholas
AU - Czakó, Andrea
AU - Yucel, Murat
AU - Rumpf, Hans Jürgen
AU - Walitza, Susanne
AU - Wellsted, David
AU - Menchon, Jose M.
AU - Montag, Christian
AU - Hall, Natalie
AU - Brand, Matthias
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2026/2
Y1 - 2026/2
N2 - Background: There is increasing global concern about the harms associated with problematic usage of the internet (PUI) affecting young people. Various risk factors have been proposed, but there is a scarcity of reliable evidence on the extent of the problem, who is most at risk of developing PUI and why, and how best to tackle it. Objectives: BootStRaP (ISRCTN59576080) is a five-year multinational research programme designed to boost young people's health and resilience by determining, through prospective longitudinal assessment, the risk factors associated with PUI and its health economic impact and designing and testing preventative self-management interventions tailored to individual risk factors. Methods: This paper describes the first phase of the project (i.e., Cohort 1). A sample of over 2500 schoolchildren aged 12–16 years was recruited across nine European countries. They were prospectively monitored over a 6-month period using a dedicated smartphone application (BootstrApp), through which their internet use habits, health and wellbeing were measured. Young people were involved in the co-design of aspects of the protocol including the recruitment plan and elements of the app design. The components of the assessment battery were chosen to investigate specific individual, clinical, cognitive and environmental risk determinants as defined a priori in an evidence-based logic-model. Participants were assessed using a combination of standardised demographic and clinical questionnaires, ambulatory assessment techniques, cognitive testing and passive digital monitoring. Multimodal data is analysed according to machine learning and structured equation modelling. Expected outcomes: Our findings will contribute toward A) developing algorithms for predicting individuals at risk for PUI, B) identifying actionable variables for application to subjects as interventions for testing in the second phase of the project, C) validating risk hypotheses stated in the logic model of PUI including the interplay between predisposing risk factors (e.g., impulsivity, compulsivity), affective and cognitive processes (e.g., reward-related attentional biases), and executive functions (e.g., inhibitory control), D) calculating the health economic cost and impact of PUI in young people across Europe.
AB - Background: There is increasing global concern about the harms associated with problematic usage of the internet (PUI) affecting young people. Various risk factors have been proposed, but there is a scarcity of reliable evidence on the extent of the problem, who is most at risk of developing PUI and why, and how best to tackle it. Objectives: BootStRaP (ISRCTN59576080) is a five-year multinational research programme designed to boost young people's health and resilience by determining, through prospective longitudinal assessment, the risk factors associated with PUI and its health economic impact and designing and testing preventative self-management interventions tailored to individual risk factors. Methods: This paper describes the first phase of the project (i.e., Cohort 1). A sample of over 2500 schoolchildren aged 12–16 years was recruited across nine European countries. They were prospectively monitored over a 6-month period using a dedicated smartphone application (BootstrApp), through which their internet use habits, health and wellbeing were measured. Young people were involved in the co-design of aspects of the protocol including the recruitment plan and elements of the app design. The components of the assessment battery were chosen to investigate specific individual, clinical, cognitive and environmental risk determinants as defined a priori in an evidence-based logic-model. Participants were assessed using a combination of standardised demographic and clinical questionnaires, ambulatory assessment techniques, cognitive testing and passive digital monitoring. Multimodal data is analysed according to machine learning and structured equation modelling. Expected outcomes: Our findings will contribute toward A) developing algorithms for predicting individuals at risk for PUI, B) identifying actionable variables for application to subjects as interventions for testing in the second phase of the project, C) validating risk hypotheses stated in the logic model of PUI including the interplay between predisposing risk factors (e.g., impulsivity, compulsivity), affective and cognitive processes (e.g., reward-related attentional biases), and executive functions (e.g., inhibitory control), D) calculating the health economic cost and impact of PUI in young people across Europe.
KW - Addictive behaviours
KW - Affect regulation
KW - Behavioural addictions
KW - Children and adolescents
KW - Impulsive behaviour
KW - Inhibitory control
KW - Internet addiction
KW - Prevention
KW - Problematic use of the internet
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105025592702
U2 - 10.1016/j.comppsych.2025.152653
DO - 10.1016/j.comppsych.2025.152653
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105025592702
SN - 0010-440X
VL - 145
JO - Comprehensive Psychiatry
JF - Comprehensive Psychiatry
M1 - 152653
ER -