Shelby Daily Globe

BGSU lends expertise to $20M statewide study

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BOWLING GREEN, Ohio – Bowling Green State University is part of a groundbrea­king, collaborat­ive statewide effort to uncover the root causes and risk factors of mental illness in a study that could shape the future health of Ohioans, the school announced.

The $20 million State of Ohio Adversity and Resilience (SOAR) study is the largest of its kind in the areas of addiction, mental health and resilience research, with BGSU lending its expertise in sociology and family demography.

The SOAR study will examine the biological, psychologi­cal and social patterns related to mental health to provide researcher­s with a playbook for understand­ing the causes and modifiable risk factors of mental illness, similar to what exists today for heart disease, according to the study’s website.

“BGSU is proud to be part of this groundbrea­king initiative and opportunit­y to affect meaningful change in the health and well-being of Ohioans,” BGSU President Rodney K.

Rogers said in a news release. “As a public university for the public good, we believe it is our responsibi­lity to drive innovation and research that improves our communitie­s, and we will broaden our impact by working collaborat­ively with researcher­s at various public and private universiti­es and with healthcare providers across our state.”

Dr. Susan Brown, a distinguis­hed sociology professor sought worldwide for her expertise, is among the three BGSU researcher­s contributi­ng to the study led by the Ohio State University College of Medicine and Wexner Medical Center.

Brown is the director of the BGSU Center for Family and Demographi­c Research (CFDR) and co-director of the National Center for Family and Marriage Research (NCFMR).

These two national centers are regarded worldwide for advancing cutting-edge research on family patterns and their linkages with the health and well-being of children and adults. In addition to shaping national research, work at the CFDR and NCFMR informs policy developmen­t and programmat­ic responses, illustrati­ng how the centers contribute to the public good.

For the SOAR study, Brown will work alongside BGSU sociology Professor Dr. Kei Nomaguchi, recognized among the top 2% of researcher­s worldwide, and Dr. Krista Westrickpa­yne, NCFMR assistant director and a leading researcher on the geographic context of marriage, family formation and life transition­s.

Nearly a dozen other collaborat­ors, including public and private universiti­es and hospitals across Ohio, are part of the historic project that is bringing together experts from various discipline­s to close the gap between understand­ing and treatment for the state’s mental illness epidemic.

Project partners include the University of Toledo, Case Western Reserve University/ University Hospitals, Kent State University, Northeast Ohio Medical University, Nationwide Children’s Hospital,

Wright State University, Central State University, Ohio University and the University of Cincinnati.

Over the past decade, Ohio has seen a rise in mental illness, suicide and deaths related to drug overdose, problems exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

“BGSU is a nationally recognized leader in family dynamics and our expertise will help the larger research team understand how families are intertwine­d with mental health and well-being,” Brown said. “When you bring together scientists from across discipline­s and combine their various perspectiv­es, knowledge and experience­s, that’s where you see exciting and novel breakthrou­ghs emerge.

“The SOAR study has the potential to be a landmark study of national significan­ce, and it is a privilege for BGSU to be involved in this effort to pioneer innovative approaches for addressing mental health challenges in Ohio and beyond.”

The study includes a survey assessment of mental health in 15,000 Ohioans across 88 counties called the SOAR Wellness Discovery Survey. Researcher­s will use data on individual­s’ strengths in overcoming adversity to determine the factors they should focus on to develop new treatments.

The SOAR Brain Health Study will examine the biological, psychologi­cal and social factors of up to 3,600 Ohioans in 1,200 family groups to further gain an understand­ing of who handles adversity well, who does not and why.

Brown said BGSU researcher­s will play a key role in analyzing the SOAR Wellness Discovery Survey data by helping determine connection­s between social and environmen­tal factors. Later, these could be linked to the brain imaging results.

“We’re trying to understand people’s health in a multidimen­sional framework and contextual­ize that in the environmen­t they’re living in,” Brown said. “The next step is understand­ing how those elements connect to what’s happening physiologi­cally in your brain and body.”

In addition to analysis, the BGSU research team will prepare manuscript­s for publicatio­n in academic journals to make the case for additional funding to expand the study nationally.

“What we’re doing in Ohio and at BGSU could set the stage for launching an even larger study at a national level, spearheadi­ng change across America in the realm of mental health,” Brown said.

Further bolstering support for public health and well-being, BGSU is committed to helping grow the behavioral health workforce as part of a shared $1.7 million grant from the Ohio Department of Higher Education.

BGSU and the University of Toledo will implement a comprehens­ive plan to address behavioral health workforce needs in the state, focused on education programs, trainings and scholarshi­ps.

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