ECDP was a Design Study which created the specification and business case for a European Research Infrastructure that will provide, over the next 25 years, comparative longitudinal survey data on child and young adult well-being. The infrastructure developed by ECDP will subsequently coordinate the first Europe wide cohort survey, which we name EuroCohort. There is at present no equivalent data source available to scientists to comparatively analyse the well-being of children as they grow up and therefore to develop policies to improve their well-being.
The aim of developing the infrastructure for EuroCohort was realised within ECDP through the following three objectives:
1.Building support from key political policy makers with a brief which covers child well-being as well as national funding agencies tasked with infrastructural spending on science and survey data collection
2.Develop a scientifically excellent research design
3.Establish a robust operational framework that will ensure the logistic integrity of EuroCohort.
The culmination of ECDP has been in the creation of an infrastructural platform with a commitment from key stakeholders across Europe and from which the next stages in finalising EuroCohort can begin.
Main results
WP2: Concepts, measures and analysis requirements In this work package, we identified currently relevant policy fields of child and youth well-being and linked them to measurement instruments.
WP3: The Business Case: Costs, Cost- benefit analysis and case studies
Obtained realistic estimates for the construction of, and ongoing annual costs, for each EU member states to undertake EuroCohort using information about the sample size, frequency of data collection and staff costs.
WP4: Political and financial support
The main outcomes from the policy mapping and networking were that:
-Research interest has been increased, i.e. the academic community supports the idea of a longitudinal survey on children’ and young people’s well-being.
-Political support has been secured through letters of support available in many cases (Ministries and government bodies) and most of the policy makers seem to understand and acknowledge the necessity of a EuroCohort.
WP6: Engagement with children, young people, and families
The EuroCohort project emphasizes the importance of a child-centred approach and posits that survey measures, format, and ways of implementation should be developmentally valid and appropriate for child and youth as survey participants. Furthermore, when results from the survey become available, children and young people (CYP) should be key stakeholders in their interpretation and use.
WP7: Ethics and Privacy
The EuroCohort Ethical Protocol highlights the legal requirements contained in the EU Regulation for Data Protection (GDPR), as well as to add guidelines that will serve the consortium research community as an ethical framework, namely with what concerns the longitudinal nature of the project.
WP8: EuroCohort Survey Design
The significant result achieved by WP8 is to have developed a comprehensive set of procedures and protocols that will enable the collection and dissemination of EuroCohort data to the highest standards, and to have documented these procedures and protocols in a series of deliverables and working papers that will enable those working on EuroCohort in the future to deliver the project efficiently and effectively.
WP9: Pilot Survey Requirements
The piloting should bring critical information about the pertinence, viability and obstacles of both EuroCohort’s contents and logistical issues. The valuable potential of the piloting stems from the fact that the proposed piloting is exhaustive.
Dissemination
• 5 academic publications and 4 working papers published
https://www.eurocohort.eu/academic-publications/(si apre in una nuova finestra) https://www.eurocohort.eu/working-papers/(si apre in una nuova finestra)• Written and distributed 5 policy briefs (
https://www.eurocohort.eu/policy-briefs(si apre in una nuova finestra))
• Written and distributed 4 briefing papers (
https://www.eurocohort.eu/briefings(si apre in una nuova finestra))
• Successful Twitter account @EuroCohort
• Active web site
https://www.eurocohort.eu/home/(si apre in una nuova finestra)• YouTube account containing 17 project videos
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsSAheaWN1FdYk2Hi3TnOFw(si apre in una nuova finestra)