Skip to content
Orygen Identifyd Study
  • About
  • Contact
Orygen Identifyd Study
Orygen Identifyd Study

Consent Form

Study Registration Form

Please note: All data entered into this website may be stored for up to 30 days in the cloud in an encrypted manner. After 30 days stored data is deleted.

Eligibility Screening

DD slash MM slash YYYY
Are you currently a client of headspace(Required)
Are you currently, or have you previously experienced depression?(Required)

Have you ever been diagnosed with any of the following conditions, or received any of the following treatments?

Psychosis(Required)
Bipolar Disorder(Required)
Severe Substance Abuse Disorder(Required)
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)(Required)
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder(Required)
Electroconvulsive Therapy(Required)

Thank you for that information!

Based on your responses, you meet the eligibility criteria for this study.
Now the next step is for your to read the consent form and provide consent. Click next to continue.

Thank you for your responses. Please click next below and then submit to send your responses on to the study team. We will be in touch with you to let you know if you are eligible to participate in the study within the next 7 days.


Please read all the information below, and then at the bottom of the page, press the submit button to go on to the consent page.


If you are 15 years old, you will also need to have your parent or guardian provide consent.
If you are 16 or 17, after you read the consent form we will ask you a few questions to determine whether we also need your parent or guardian to provide consent for you to participate.
If you are 18 years or above, you can consent for yourself without parent or guardian consent.
Short Name of Project IDENTIFYD
Full Name of Project IDENTIFying the risk of recurrent and chronic Youth Depression (IDENTIFYD): A prospective longitudinal cohort study
Principal Investigator Professor Lianne Schmaal
Project Sponsor Orygen
Site Name headspace National

What am I being invited to do?

We, the Orygen Mood Research Team, invite you to take part in a project that is trying to identify the risk factors that contribute to young people experiencing long term or repeated depression. You have been invited to take part because you are a young person between 15 and 25 years old, who is a client of headspace with an experience of depression, and you have indicated you may be interested in participating in this study.

Around 3000 young people will take part in this project. They will be clients of any headspace centre in Australia.

Please read this information and feel free to ask any questions. You can take some time to make up your mind and decide if this project is right for you. You can also talk to someone you trust, like a family member, friend, or your local doctor.

What is the purpose of this project?

In this project, our aim is to create a tool to identify young people who are at risk of experiencing longterm or repeated depression. This tool is called a ‘risk calculator’. The tool will consider a wide range of aspects of a young person’s life, including depression, clinical, medical and pharmaceutical history (optional), cognitive, psychological, and social factors that are linked to depression (see a visual representation of this in figure 1 below).

Figure 1: Factors in repeated or long-term depression

As well, the study is interested in identifying factors that impact young people’s recovery from depression, and development of other mental health concerns (such as anxiety).

Do I have to take part and can I change my mind?

Taking part is up to you

You get to decide whether you take part in this project. You can say yes or no.

Your decision won’t affect your relationship with your headspace clinician or the research team at Orygen, or headspace, or Orygen. If you don’t take part, your engagement with headspace will continue as normal.

You can change your mind at any time

If you do take part, you can stop at any time. If you want to stop, please tell someone in the project team. You do not have to tell us the reason.

Once you stop taking part, we will not collect any more information about you. We will keep the information we have already collected to make sure the results of the project can be measured properly

The project might stop for other reasons

We might need to stop the project while you are taking part. If this happens, we will explain the reasons to you.

We may also ask you to stop taking part in the project if it is no longer in your best interest. If this happens, we will discuss this with you.

What do I have to do if I take part?

If you take part in this project, you will be a participant for 18 months from the time that you complete the first assessment. You can withdraw at any time. If you are 15 years old, or you are 16 or 17 years of age and required parental consent, your parent can also withdraw you at any time. You will be reimbursed for your participation. More detail about reimbursement is found later on in this document.

The main component of the study involves completion of online surveys across 18 months. These surveys contain a variety of questionnaires asking questions about your life circumstances, lifestyle, sleep habits, mood symptoms, strange thoughts, suicidal thoughts and behaviours, eating disorders, personality, physical pain symptoms, memory and attention.

If you consent to participate, you will be asked to complete 10 online surveys every two months over the course of 18 months (see visual representation of this in figure 2 below). Once you are enrolled in the study, you will receive an online baseline survey, which will take approximately 2 hours to complete. Following the baseline survey, you will receive 15-minute surveys every 2 months through the study period of 18 months.

The 6-, 12-, and 18-month surveys will have a few additional questions and are expected to take 30 minutes in total to complete. The online surveys can be completed either on a computer, tablet, or mobile phone.

Up to 690 participants will be contacted to recruit a random sample of up to 276 participants to complete a questionnaire about depression and anxiety over the phone or via videoconferencing with a research team member. Contact will occur at baseline and at 6 month follow up, with a total of 138 participants required for each time point. It is expected this would take up to 60 minutes to complete. If you are randomly selected, you can decline to participate without it effecting your involvement in any other aspects of the study.

There are also three additional optional components of the study, which are described below.

Optional component 1: Brief daily survey on your smartphone.

You have the option to participate in short (2-3 minute) daily surveys that will ask you questions about what you are doing, what you are thinking and how you are feeling. To do this you will need to install an application called mPATH on your mobile phone. Surveys are sent once daily. You can also request that the frequency with which you receive the surveys is reduced for certain periods of time throughout the study, or to pause them completely for a period, if you would like a break from it. The application mPATH is owned by a Belgium Company called M-PATH Software and we license it from them. M-PATH Software will only receive deidentified data about you. M-PATH Software may use that data to improve and further develop the software and the m-Path services and only can process the information as strictly as necessary for its purposes.

Choosing not to participate in optional component 1 or withdrawing from optional component 1 does not stop you from participating in the main study or optional component 2.

Optional component 2: Genetic assessment via saliva sample

You also have the option to participate in genetic testing by providing us with a saliva sample.

What is genetic epidemiological research?

Genes are made of DNA – the chemical structure carrying your genetic information that determines many human characteristics such as the colour of your eyes or hair. Researchers study genes to understand why some people have a certain condition such as depression and why some people do not. Understanding a person’s genes may also explain why some people respond to a treatment while others don’t, or why some people experience side effects and others don’t.

If you consent to this, you will be sent a saliva test kit with all required materials and instructions and a pre-paid return post envelope. You will be required to post your sample back to the study co-investigators at the University of Queensland via the prepaid return post envelope (at no cost to you). You will be able to contact a member of the research team if you need any help or advice about completing the process. We will extract your DNA from your sample to investigate genetic risk factors for depression and medication response. The type of genetic analysis being conducted in this study is not designed to provide information about your future health, future treatment or risk of having children with a genetic disorder. It is also not designed to provide information that may be relevant to the health of family members who are not part of the project. We also do not expect that it will have any consequences for your future insurance or employment. We will not provide you with any individual results from analysis of the research samples you provide us.

Choosing not to participate in optional component 2 or withdrawing from optional component 2 does not stop you from participating in the main study or optional component 1.

Optional component 3: Access to Australian Institute of Health and Welfare National Health Database Hub, and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services.

To also help determine the cost to society of peoples experience of mental health concerns, as well as to explore other factors that may help understand outcomes related to depression the team will seek to access your information that is available from the National Health Data Hub (NHDH) via the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), and your information that is available from the ambulance service in your state. The NHDH is an data system that provides information from a variety of databases across Australian states and territories. If, you provide consent to this, the research team would provide your information to the AIHW NHDH team in a secure manner, and they then provide the research team with the data we request from them about you in a deidentified manner via a secure online portal. Of the databases available, those most relevant to the study are your Medicare and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedule (PBS) information, the National Hospital Morbidity Database (NHMD), National Non-Admitted Patient Emergency Department Care Database (NNAPEDCD), National Non-Admitted Patient episode-level Databases (NNAP(el)D), the National Death Index (NDI), the National Community Mental Health Care Database (NCMHCD), the National Residential Mental Health Care Database (NRCMHCD), Child Protection National Minimum Data Set (CPND), the Australian Early Development Census database (AEDC), and the alcohol and other drugs minimum data set (AODS).

For more information about data sets available from the National Health Data Hub that researchers may access, please visit https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports-data/nhdh/data

For State and Territory Based Ambulance Services data, researchers will provide your information to the relevant members of the ambulance service, and they will provide your data back to the research team in a secure and identifiable manner. The research team will then take responsibility for ensuring only authorised study members have access to the information in an identifiable form, and will only present your information publicly in a de-identified manner. Ambulance services data will include information about participant interactions with ambulance services, which would include call outs and transport to hospitals. Of primary interest to the research team will be ambulance service engagement that is recorded by the relevant service as indicating a mental health related experience / reason for call out. This could include things such as self-harm, substance use or psychotic episodes. Choosing not to participate in optional component 3 or withdrawing from optional component 3 does not stop you from participating in the main study or optional component 1.



This table below outlines what you need to do in this project. For more information, please ask a member of the project team via the study’s email address contact@identifyd.org.au.

What part of the project? What do I have to do? Expected Time Length Requirement Reimbursement
Review Study Materials Please watch each of the videos on the study website and read the participant information and consent form. 30 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $0
Consenting to take part in this project If you are happy to take part in this project, you will be asked to sign a consent form. 5 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $0
Baseline Assessment After you have consented you will be sent a link to the first online survey. This is called a baseline assessment and is considerably longer than the other surveys you will be asked to complete. 2 Hours Internet access, access to web browser $60 If you complete at least 80% of the baseline assessment
Assessments every two months (Month 2, 4, 8, 10, 14, 16) Every two months you will be sent a survey asking about a few different aspects of how you are going. 15 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $7.50 per survey, and the possibility of entry into a draw to win one of two iPads (dependent on completion rate of bi monthly and 6 monthly assessments).
Assessments every 6 months
(Months 6,12,18)
Every six months you will be sent a survey that is the same as the one at two months, but with some extra questions. 30 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $15 per survey, and the possibility of entry into a draw to win one of two iPads (dependent on completion rate of bi monthly and 6 monthly assessments).
Optional Saliva Assessment If you choose to participate in the optional saliva assessment, you will be mailed a kit that will allow you to provide a saliva sample, and will include a pre-paid return addressed envelope for you to send the sample back to our laboratory in Queensland. 30 minutes Access to post office to return sample $30
Optional Daily Surveys If you choose to participate in the optional daily surveys, you will need to install an application on your phone and then complete the surveys as they are sent to you daily. 2 – 3 minutes per day Smart phone with internet access to receive and complete surveys Up to $82 and the possibility of entering draws that could result in winning three of nine $100 gift cards.
Optional access to data available from the Australian Institute of Welfare National Data Hub and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services Data If you provide consent to do this we will access your data that is available from the AIHW National Health Data Hub, and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services. N/A N/A N/A

Payment for your time and expenses Reimbursement will be as follows:
  • For completion of the main study online surveys, you will be reimbursed at the rate of $30 per hour for all survey completion (maximum $150). You will be paid every 6 months the total amount you have accrued based on the number of assessments you have completed over the 6-month period.
    • If you complete 80% of the main study surveys over the 18-month period, you will go into the running to win one of two iPads.
  • If you are randomly selected to participate in the clinician administered depression and anxiety questionnaires and you choose to complete them, you will be reimbursed $30 for completing them.
  • If you participate in the optional daily assessments, you are reimbursed for the 2 to 3-minute daily surveys for a total of $82.00 by the end of the study if 80% of the surveys are completed. You will be paid every 6 months the total amount you have accrued based on the number of assessments you have completed over the 6-month period.
    • Depending on your completion rate of the optional daily assessment surveys, you may go into the running to win up to three of nine $100 gift vouchers.
  • If you participate in the optional genetic testing, you will be reimbursed $30 for completing and returning the saliva sample. You will be paid after we have received the sample.
  • The reimbursement will be directly deposited into the provided bank account and gift vouchers will be sent through your email account

What are the benefits of taking part?

You may not directly benefit from taking part in this project. By taking part, you will help the researchers understand more about factors that contribute to young people experiencing long-term or repeated depression. This knowledge may help people in the future.

What are the risks and discomforts of taking part?

There are potential risks to you from taking part in this project.

Suicidal thoughts and behaviour

This study will ask you about suicidal thoughts and behaviours. However, the assessments are not monitored in real time, and the study is not able to provide you with immediate clinical support. If you have experienced or are experiencing suicidal thoughts and behaviours when you complete a study assessment, please contact mental health services, they can go to the local emergency department, or call emergency services. At the beginning of each of these surveys you will automatically be will be presented with a list of support services that you can contact.

  • If you require immediate or emergency support, please call 000 or present to your nearest emergency department.
  • Kids Helpline provides free 24/7 phone and online counselling for children aged 5 to 25 years. You can call them on 1800 55 1800.
  • Lifeline provides free 24/7 online and phone crisis support. You can call them on 13 11 14.
  • Suicide Call Back Service provides free 24/7 phone and online counselling and crisis support. You can call them on 1300 659 467.
  • eheadspace provides free phone, chat, and email counselling for young people aged between 12 and 25. They’re available seven days a week, from 9am to 1am AEST. You can call them on 1800 650 890 or visit eheadspace.org.au.
  • If you identify as LGBTQIA+, Qlife provide a phone and online support. It’s run by queer people for queer people and is available from 3pm to midnight every day of the week. You can call them on 1800 184 527
  • If you’ve been impacted by sexual assault or domestic violence, 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) provide free and confidential phone and online counselling and support 24/7

If you respond in a manner to questions about suicidal thoughts and behaviour that may indicate you are at risk you will be notified during the survey that you may be at risk and a member of the study team will contact you within 48 hours of your assessment completion. You will also be represented with the emergency services contact information. The study team will contact you by calling you on your phone to provide you with the details of the crisis services.

Chance of distress

The surveys you complete as part of the main study ask about a variety of experiences and how you are feeling, which may influence your mood. Although unlikely, they may cause distress. If this happens, you can take a break from or stop the survey at any time. You can then resume the survey later or choose to not complete it. You can also choose to withdraw from the study all together.

If you become distressed as a result of your participation in any aspect, you will also be able to contact the services below:

  • Lifeline: 13 11 14 (available 24/7)
  • Beyondblue: 1300 22 4636 (available 24/7)
  • Kids Helpline: 1800 55 1800 (available 24/7)
  • e-headspace: https://www.eheadspace.org.au (available 9am-1am Melbourne time, every day)

If I take part, what will happen to my information and samples?

Collecting your information

We will collect information for the project directly from you.

We will also collect information for this project from other services if you allow us to. The information will be linked to a unique code, also known as an identification number, for you. This de-identifies your data, allowing it to be analyzed and shared in an anonymous manner. We will not link your identification number to your name or contact information.

Data collected during this study may also be stored in the Cloud, which refers to servers in a data centre, which are managed by a third party and accessible through the internet. When storing information in the cloud, we will replace your name with a participant code. Coded data will be encrypted and stored on a secure Cloud server to prevent improper access. The SMS service used to send you will receive the information you provide to us as your first name in the demographics questionnaire, and your mobile number. This information is encrypted and stored in the cloud, and is deleted within 30 days of the SMS being sent. The SMS service provider retains non-identifiable data indefinitely until deletion. Deletion can be requested by the research team at any time, or is conducted by SMS service when the account is terminated.

If you consent to the optional component of allowing us to access to your data from the AIHW NHDH and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services, we will access them as described in the table below:

Where will we get your information from (optional) What kind of information we will get Who is responsible for the information
AIHW NHDH Various datasets available for national linkage Australian Federal Government
State and territory-based ambulance services Your usage of ambulance services Australian State Governments

For this project we are asking participants to provide a type of consent called ‘extended consent’. Extended consent is where the data in this project can be used for future research projects related to this research project, that will benefit young people with depression and mental health conditions. The data will only be used in a de-identified way and researchers will not have access to your personalised data.

Keeping your information safe

To keep your information safe, we will:

  • follow all relevant privacy requirements
  • keep it securely on an electronic database
  • take steps to prevent anyone from accessing information that identifies you unless they need to, for example, to check it in an audit
  • give it a code and keep it separate from anything that could easily identify you, like your name or contact information.

You can ask us to tell you what information we have collected about you as part of this project. If your information is not correct, you can also ask us to change it.

The research team (researchers and assistants) will keep your information for 15 years after you turn 18, or if you are 18 years or older when you commence participation, for 15 years after the study completes. After this, we will destroy it.

Keeping your samples safe

We will keep your saliva sample safe by:

  • keeping them securely at Human Studies Unit at the Institute of Molecular Bioscience at the University of Queensland.
  • giving them a code and keeping them separate from anything that could easily identify you, like your name or contact information.

We will keep any leftover samples that have not been used up in the project for 15 years after you turn 18, or if you are 18 years or older when you commence participation, for 15 years after the study completes. After this, we will destroy them.

Sharing your information with others

We will only share your information with others, if required to by law.

  • Legal requirements to share your information: some information needs to be shared with others by law.

If, responses that you provide disclose information about past trauma or abuse that leads us to believe that you or someone else may be in danger, we may need to act. This could involve contacting government authorities such as the Victorian Department of Families, Fairness and Housing or the NSW Child Protection Helpline about risk to children under the age of 17 years. Mandatory reporting laws oblige psychologists and doctors to report any suspected cases of child abuse or neglect to government authorities (as per the Children, Youth and Families Act 2005 in Victoria and the Children and Young Persons Care and Protection, Act 1998 in NSW). If abuse is reported, the information collected by researchers will be shared with your clinical team, and standard clinical procedures within your service will be followed. This may entail reporting the abuse to government authorities or other support services. We will make every effort to discuss this with you beforehand. If you disclose information about past trauma or abuse that leads us to believe someone else may be in danger, we may need to act. This could involve contacting government authorities such as the Victorian Department of Families, Fairness and Housing or the NSW Child Protection Helpline about risk to children under the age of 17 years. Mandatory reporting laws oblige psychologists and doctors to report any suspected cases of child abuse or neglect to government authorities (as per the Children, Youth and Families Act 2005 in Victoria and the Children and Young Persons Care and Protection, Act 1998 in NSW). If abuse is reported, the information collected by researchers will be shared with your clinical team, and standard clinical procedures within your service will be followed. This may entail reporting the abuse to government authorities or other support services. We will make every effort to discuss this with you beforehand.

This research project involves gathering information on drug usage. Please be aware that the use, possession, or distribution of many drugs is illegal in Victoria and other Australian jurisdictions. While we typically won’t disclose your information without consent, there may be rare instances where we are obligated to do so for legal purposes. For instance, such information might be relevant in criminal investigations, Family Court proceedings, child protection cases, matters before the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal, or inquests.

Please refrain from disclosing specifics about events or activities, such as crimes you haven’t been charged with or haven’t faced court proceedings for. We do not require, nor have we ever been legally compelled, to provide our research data to others for legal reasons. However, should such a situation arise, we will endeavor to inform you before disclosing any information.

Upon completion of the study, all data linking participants’ drug use to identifiable information will be deleted. This ensures that in the long-term, no data capable of identifying you regarding drug use will be retained.

While there is a very minimal risk that this information may be requested by a court before the study’s conclusion, such occurrences are exceedingly rare and have not happened in our or our colleagues’ experience over the last 25 years. If a court does request information, we will petition the court to withhold releasing information that could identify you.

  • Sharing information with other researchers: we will share certain information from this project so that other researchers can use it in the future. These researchers may be in Australia or overseas. We will only share information that has been aggregated (that is, joined together with information from others before sharing to ensure anonymisation).
  • How may my information and samples be shared in the future?

    As described above, we are asking you to provide extended consent for us to share and use your information, including your saliva sample if you provide one, for future research. Sharing information with others can help make all research more effective. 

    When we share your information and samples, we will take steps to make it difficult for anyone to link the information back to you. This includes removing information that could easily identify you, like your name or contact information. There is still a very small chance that someone could identify you again.

    If you agree, we may share your information and samples for research that is very similar to this project. They may work for a commercial organisation like a pharmaceutical company or medical device company.  

    By agreeing to participate in this study you agree to us sharing your information and samples. However, you will not be told about the future research projects.

    If you change your mind, you have the option to ask us to stop sharing your information and samples. However, if your information or samples have already been shared, it may not be possible to retrieve or destroy them.

    Who is running and paying for this project?

    This project is being run by Orygen, Centre for Youth Mental Health at the University of Melbourne.

    This project is being funded by NHMRC Investigator Grant L1 2017962 awarded to Prof. Lianne Schmaal

    Who has approved this project?

    The University of Melbourne Human Ethics Research Committee has approved this project. This committee makes sure that this project meets Australian ethical standards for research that involves people.

    Complaints about how this project is being run

    If you have any complaints about how this project is being run, please contact:

    Role: Research Integrity Officer, Office of Research Ethics and Integrity, University of Melbourne.

    Contact: research-integrity@unimelb.edu.au

    Phone number: +61 3 8344 1376

    Project Code: 27305

    What happens if something goes wrong?

    In an emergency, you should call 000 or go to the emergency department at your nearest hospital.

    Where can I find more information?

    Thank you for taking the time to read this information about our project. You can contact a member of the project team at any time to ask questions.

    Phone: 0437 541 890
    Email: contact@identifyd.org.au

    We just need to see how well you understand the study before you provide your consent; bear with us and take this small survey below:

    What is IDENTIFYD about?(Required)
    How old do you have to be to participate in IDENTIFYD?(Required)
    Do you HAVE to participate in IDENTIFYD?(Required)
    Can you stop participating in IDENTIFYD?(Required)
    What happens to the information you provide?(Required)
    Do you have to provide a saliva sample, be part of the daily surveys or allow access to your data available from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and State and Territories Based Ambulance Services records to participate?(Required)

    Participant Information and Consent Form

    Thank you for reading the participant information and consent form. Please provide your consent below

    Consent

    By signing this consent form, I acknowledge that:

    • I freely agree to take part in this project
    • I certify that the information I have provided is correct
    • I agree to my information and samples being collected, stored and shared for future research related to this project
    • I understand that I can stop taking part in the project at any time
    • I have read, or have had read to me, the information provided about this project and understand what is involved
    • I have had the opportunity to consider the information, ask questions and am satisfied with the answers I received

    Please indicate your consent for the following optional parts of the project:

    I agree to participate in the genetic assessment by providing a saliva sample(Required)
    I agree to participate in the daily surveys via an application on my smart phone(Required)
    I give permission for my data from AIHW NHDH and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services to be accessed for the purposes of this project(Required)
    I agree to being contacted by Orygen researchers about participation in other projects, during this project, and after my participation in this project is complete(Required)
    I agree to being contacted by Orygen about opportunities to provide my perspective about this project or about research participation more generally(Required)
    Clear Signature
    DD slash MM slash YYYY

    You require your parents consent to participate as well. This is the consent form for them to read and sign. If your parents are not available at the moment you can save the form at the bottom and continue the process when they are ready.


    Parent/Guardian Consent form

    Short Name of Project IDENTIFYD
    Full Name of Project IDENTIFying the risk of recurrent and chronic Youth Depression (IDENTIFYD): A prospective longitudinal cohort study
    Principal Investigator Professor Lianne Schmaal
    Project Sponsor Orygen
    Site Name headspace National

    What am I being invited to do?

    We, the Orygen Mood Research Team, invite your child to take part in a project that is trying to identify the risk factors that contribute to young people experiencing long term or repeated depression. Your child has been invited to take part because your child is a young person between 15 and 25 years old, who is a client of headspace with an experience of depression, and you have indicated you may be interested in participating in this study.

    Around 3000 young people will take part in this project. They will be clients of any headspace centre in Australia.

    Please read this information and feel free to ask any questions. You can take some time to make up your mind and decide if this project is right for you. You can also talk to someone you trust, like a family member, friend, or your local doctor.

    What is the purpose of this project?

    In this project, our aim is to create a tool to identify young people who are at risk of experiencing long‑term or repeated depression. This tool is called a ‘risk calculator’. The tool will consider a wide range of aspects of a young person’s life, including clinical, medical and pharmaceutical history (optional), cognitive, psychological, and social factors that are linked to depression (see a visual representation of this in figure 1 below).

    Figure 1: Factors in repeated or long-term depression

    As well, the study is interested in identifying factors that impact young people’s recovery from depression, and development of other mental health concerns (such as anxiety).

    Your child can participate in genetic testing by providing a saliva sample. This will help us to identify genetic factors linked to depression, offering insights into its causes, risk factors, and potential personalised treatments.

    Do I have to take part and can I change my mind?

    Taking part is up to you and your child

    You and your child get to decide whether your child will take part in this project. You can say yes or no.

    Your decision won’t affect your relationship with your headspace clinician or the research team at Orygen, or headspace, or Orygen. If you don’t take part, your engagement with headspace will continue as normal.

    You can change your mind at any time

    If your child does take part, they can stop at any time. If your child wants to stop, you or your child should tell someone in the project team. Your child does not have to tell us the reason.

    Once your child stops taking part, we will not collect any more information about them. We will keep the information we have already collected to make sure the results of the project can be measured properly.

    The project might stop for other reasons

    We might need to stop the project while your child is taking part. If this happens, we will explain the reasons to you and your child.

    We may also ask your child to stop taking part in the project if it is no longer in their best interest. If this happens, we will discuss this with you and your child.

    What does my child have to do if they take part?

    If your child takes part in this project, they will be in it for 18 months from the time the your child complete the first assessment. This table below outlines what your child needs to do in this project. For more information, please ask a member of the project team.

    Your child will be reimbursed for the participation. More detail about reimbursement is found later in this document.

    The main component of the study involves completion of online surveys across 18 months. These surveys contain a variety of questionnaires asking questions about your child’s life circumstances, lifestyle, sleep habits, mood symptoms, strange thoughts, suicidal thoughts and behaviours, eating disorders, personality, physical pain symptoms, memory and attention. If an individual under the age of 18 exhibits indications of active suicidality, their parents or legal guardians will be informed.

    If you and your child consent to participate they will be asked to complete 10 online surveys over a period of 18 months (see visual representation of this in figure 2 below). Once your child is enrolled in the study, they will receive an online baseline survey, which will take approximately 2 hours to complete. Following, the baseline survey, your child will receive 15-minute surveys every 2 months through the study period of 18 months

    The 6-, 12-, and 18-month surveys will have a few additional questions and are expected to take 30 minutes in total to complete. The online surveys can be completed either on a computer, tablet, or mobile phone.

    Up to 690 participants will also be contacted to recruit a random sample of up to 276 participants to to complete a questionnaire about depression and anxiety over the phone or via videoconferencing with a research team member. It is expected this would take up to 60 minutes to complete. Contact will occur at baseline and at 6 month follow up, with a total of 138 participants required for each time point. If your child is randomly selected, you can decline to participate without it effecting their involvement in any other aspects of the study. There are also three additional optional components of the study, which are described below.

    Optional component 1: Brief daily survey on your smartphone.

    Your child will have the option to participate in short (2-3 minute) daily surveys that will ask some questions about what they are doing, what they are thinking and how your child is feeling. To do this you will need to install an application called mPATH on their mobile phone. Surveys are sent once daily. Your child can also request that the frequency with which they receive the surveys is reduced for certain periods of time throughout the study, or to pause them completely for a period, if they would like a break from it. The application mPATH is owned by a Belgium Company called M-PATH Software and we license it from them. M-PATH Software will only receive deidentified data about your child. M-PATH Software may use that data to improve and further develop the software and the m-Path services and only can process the information as strictly as necessary for its purposes

    Choosing not to participate in optional component 1 or withdrawing from optional component 1 does not stop your child from participating in the main study or optional component 2 or optional component 3.

    Optional component 2: Genetic assessment via saliva sample

    Your child also has the option to participate in genetic testing by providing us with a saliva sample

    What is genetic epidemiological research?

    Genes are made of DNA – the chemical structure carrying your genetic information that determines many human characteristics such as the colour of your eyes or hair. Researchers study genes to understand why some people have a certain condition such as depression and why some people do not. Understanding a person’s genes may also explain why some people respond to a treatment while others don’t, or why some people experience side effects and others don’t.

    If you and your child consent to this, you will be sent a saliva test kit with all required materials and instructions and a pre-paid return post envelope. Your child will be required to post the sample back to the study co investigators at the University of Queensland via the pre-paid return post envelope (at no cost to you). You or your child will be able to contact a member of the research team if you need any help or advice about completing the process. We will extract your child’s DNA from your sample to investigate genetic risk factors for depression and medication response. Due to the nature of the analysis, we will not be able to provide the results from these tests.

    Choosing not to participate in optional component 2 or withdrawing from optional component 2 does not stop your child from participating in the main study or optional component 1.

    Optional component 3: Access to Medicare and Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedule information

    Australian Institute of Health and Welfare National Health Database Hub, and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services.

    To also help determine the cost to society of peoples experience of mental health concerns, as well as to explore other factors that may help understand outcomes related to depression the team will seek to access your child’s information that is available from the National Health Data Hub (NHDH) via the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), and your information that is available from the ambulance service in your state.

    The NHDH is an enduring linked data system that provides information from a variety of databases across Australian states and territories. If, you provide consent to this, the research team would provide your child’s information to the AIHW NHDH team in a secure manner, and they then provide the research team with your relevant data in a deidentified manner via a secure online portal.

    For State Based Ambulance Services data, researchers will provide your child’s information to the relevant members of the ambulance service, and they will provide your data back to the research team in a secure and identifiable manner. The research team will then take responsibility for ensuring only authorised study members have access to the information in an identifiable form, and will only present your child’s data publicly in a de-identified manner.

    Choosing not to participate in optional component 3 or withdrawing from optional component 3 does not stop your child from participating in the main study or optional component 1.



    This table below outlines what your child needs to do in this project. For more information, please ask a member of the project team via the study’s email address contact@identifyd.org.au. contact@identifyd.org.au.

    What part of the project? What do your child has to do? Expected Time Length Requirement Reimbursement
    Review Study Materials Please watch each of the videos on the study website and read the participant information and consent form. 30 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $0
    Consenting to take part in this project If you are happy with your child joining in on this project, we will need you to sign a parental consent form. 5 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $0
    Baseline Assessment After you have consented your chilld will be sent a link to the first online survey. This is called a baseline assessment and is considerably longer than the other surveys your child will be asked to complete. 2 Hours Internet access, access to web browser Up to $60 If you complete at least 80% of the baseline assessment
    Assessments every two months (Month 2, 4, 8, 10, 14, 16) Every two months your child will be sent a survey asking about a few different aspects of how your child is going. 15 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $7.50 and the possibility of entry into a draw to win one of two iPads ( dependent on completion rate of bi monthly and 6 monthly assessments)).
    Assessments every 6 months
    (Months 6,12,18)
    Every six months your child will be sent a survey that is the same as the one at two months, but with some extra questions. 30 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $15 and the possibility of entry into a draw to win one of two iPads ( dependent on completion rate of bi monthly and 6 monthly assessments).
    Clinician Administration of depression and anxiety measures Up to n = 276 participants will be randomly selected. 60 minutes Telephone, videoconference $30
    Optional Saliva Assessment If your child chooses to participate in the optional saliva assessment, they will be mailed a kit that will allow you to provide a saliva sample, and will include a pre-paid return addressed envelope for your child to send the sample back to our laboratory in Queensland. 30 minutes Access to post office to return sample $35
    Optional Daily Surveys If your child choose to participate in the optional daily surveys, they will need to install an application on your child’s phone and then complete the surveys as they are sent to your child daily. 2 – 3 minutes per day Smart phone with internet access to receive and complete surveys Up to $82 and thepossibility of entering draws that could result in winning three of nine $100 gift cards.
    Optional access to data available from the Australian Institute of Welfare National Data Hub and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services Data If you provide consent to do this we will access your child’s data that is available from the AIHW National Health Data Hub, and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services. N/A N/A N/A

    Payment for your child’s time and expenses

    Reimbursement will be as follows:

    • For completion of the main study online surveys, your child will be reimbursed at the rate of $30 per hour for all survey completion (maximum $150). They will be paid every 6 months the total amount your child has accrued based on the number of assessments your child has completed over the 6-month period.
      • If you complete 80% of the main study surveys over the 18-month period, your child will go into the running to win one of two iPads.
    • If your child is randomly selected to participate in the clinician administered depression and anxiety questionnaires and your child chooses to complete them, your child will be reimbursed $30 for completing them.
    • If your child participate in the optional daily assessments, they are reimbursed for the 2 to 3-minute daily surveys for a total of $82.00 by the end of the study if complete 60 – 80% surveys are completed. Your child will be paid every 6 months the total amount they have accrued based on the number of assessments completed over the 6-month period.
      • Depending on your child’s completion rate of the optional daily assessment surveys, they may go into the running to win up to three of nine $100 gift vouchers.
    • If your child participates in the optional genetic testing, they will be reimbursed $30 for completing and returning the saliva sample. They will be paid after we have received the sample.
    • The reimbursement will be directly deposited into the provided bank account and gift vouchers will be sent through their email accounts.

    What are the benefits of taking part?

    Your child may not directly benefit from taking part in this project. By taking part, your child will help the researchers understand more about factors that contribute to young people experiencing long term or repeated depression. This knowledge may help people in the future.

    There are potential risks to your child from participating in this project.

    What are the risks and discomforts of taking part?

    There are potential risks to your child from participating in this project.

    Suicidal thoughts and behaviour:

    In this study, we’ll ask your child about suicidal thoughts and behaviours. However, these assessments aren’t monitored in real time, and we’re unable to provide immediate clinical support. If your child has experienced or is experiencing suicidal thoughts and behaviours during a study assessment, please encourage them to contact mental health services, visit the local emergency department, or call emergency services. At the start of each survey, your child will automatically be presented with a list of support services they can reach out to:

    • For immediate or emergency support, they can call 000 or go to the nearest emergency department.
    • Kids Helpline offers free 24/7 phone and online counselling for children aged 5 to 25 years at 1800 55 1800.
    • Lifeline provides free 24/7 online and phone crisis support at 13 11 14.
    • Suicide Call Back Service offers free 24/7 phone and online counselling and crisis support at 1300 659 467.
    • eheadspace provides free phone, chat, and email counselling for young people aged between 12 and 25, available seven days a week from 9am to 1am AEST, at 1800 650 890 or eheadspace.org.au.
    • Qlife provides phone and online support for LGBTQIA+ individuals from 3pm to midnight every day at 1800 184 527.
    • For those impacted by sexual assault or domestic violence, 1800 RESPECT offers free and confidential phone and online counselling and support 24/7 at 1800 737 732.

    If your child responds in a manner to questions about suicidal thoughts and behaviour that may indicate they are at risk, they will be notified during the survey and a member of the study team will contact them within 48 hours of completing the assessment, providing details of crisis services.

    Chance of distress:

    The surveys your child completes as part of the main study may ask about various experiences and emotions, which could affect their mood. It is possible these surveys may cause distress. If this occurs, your child can take a break from or stop the survey at any time. They can then resume the survey later or choose not to complete it altogether. They can also choose to withdraw from the study entirely. If your child becomes distressed due to their participation, they can contact the following services:

    • Lifeline: 13 11 14 (available 24/7)
    • Beyondblue: 1300 22 4636 (available 24/7)
    • Kids Helpline: 1800 55 1800 (available 24/7)
    • e-headspace: https://www.eheadspace.org.au (available 9am-1am Melbourne time, every day)

    If my child takes part, what will happen to their information and samples?

    Collecting your child’s information

    We will collect information for the project directly from your child.

    We will also collect information for this project from other services if you and your child allow us to. The information will be linked to a unique code, also known as an identification number, for them. This de-identifies their data, allowing it to be analysed and shared in an anonymous manner. We will not link their identification number to their name or contact information.

    Data collected during this study may also be stored in the Cloud, which refers to servers in a data center, managed by a third party and accessible through the internet. When storing information in the cloud, we will replace their name with a participant code. Coded data will be encrypted and stored on a secure Cloud server to prevent improper access.

    If you and your child consents to the optional component of allowing us to access their Medicare and pharmaceutical benefits scheme information, we will access them as described in the table below:

    Where will we get your child information from (optional) What kind of information we will get Who is responsible for the information
    AIHW NHDH Your child’s usage of various datasets available for national linkage Australian Federal Government
    State and territory-based ambulance services Your child’s usage of ambulance services Australian State Governments

    For this project we are asking participants to provide a type of consent called ‘extended consent’. Extended consent is where the data in this project can be used for future research projects related to this research project, that will benefit young people with depression and mental health conditions. The data will only be used in a de-identified way and researchers will not have access to your child’s personalised data.

    Keeping your child’s information safe

    To keep your child’s information safe, we will:

    • follow all relevant privacy requirements
    • keep it securely on an electronic database
    • take steps to prevent anyone from accessing information that identifies your child unless they need to, for example, to check it in an audit
    • give it a code and keep it separate from anything that could easily identify your child, like your child’s name or contact information.

    The young person’s information is confidential and will not be shared. If your child’s information is not correct, you can also ask us to change it. We will keep your child’s information for 15 years after your child turn 18, or for 15 years after the study completes. After this, we will destroy it.  

    Keeping your child’s samples safe

    We will keep your child’s saliva sample safe by:

    • keeping them securely at location
    • giving them a code and keeping them separate from anything that could easily identify your child, like their name or contact information.

    We will keep any leftover samples that have not been used up in the project for 15 years after your child turn 18, or 15 years after the study completes. After this, we will destroy them.

    Sharing your child’s information with others

    We will only share your information with others, if required to by law.

    We will share some of your child’s information with others.

    • Legal requirements to share your child’s information: some information needs to be shared with others by law.

    If, during the interview, your child discloses information about past trauma or abuse that leads us to believe someone else may be in danger, we may need to act. This could involve contacting government authorities such as the Victorian Department of Families, Fairness and Housing or the NSW Child Protection Helpline about risk to children under the age of 17 years. Mandatory reporting laws oblige psychologists and doctors to report any suspected cases of child abuse or neglect to government authorities (as per the Children, Youth and Families Act 2005 in Victoria and the Children and Young Persons Care and Protection, Act 1998 in NSW). If abuse is reported, the information collected by researchers will be shared with their clinical team, and standard clinical procedures within their service will be followed. This may entail reporting the abuse to government authorities or other support services. We will make every effort to discuss this with you beforehand.

    This research project involves gathering information on drug usage. Please be aware that the use, possession, or distribution of methamphetamines is illegal in Victoria and other Australian jurisdictions. While we typically won’t disclose your child’s information without consent, there may be rare instances where we are obligated to do so for legal purposes. For instance, such information might be relevant in criminal investigations, Family Court proceedings, child protection cases, matters before the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal, or inquests.

    Please refrain from disclosing specifics about events or activities, such as crimes your child hasn’t been charged with or hasn’t faced court proceedings for. We do not require, nor have we ever been legally compelled, to provide our research data to others for legal reasons. However, should such a situation arise, we will endeavor to inform you before disclosing any information.

    Upon completion of the study, all data linking participants’ drug use to identifiable information will be deleted. This ensures that in the long term, no data capable of identifying your child regarding drug use will be retained.

    While there is a very minimal risk that this information may be requested by a court before the study’s conclusion, such occurrences are exceedingly rare and have not happened in our or our colleagues’ experience over the last 25 years. If a court does request information, we will petition the court to withhold releasing information that could identify your child.

    • Sharing information with other researchers: we will share certain information from this project so that other researchers can use it in the future. These researchers may be in Australia or overseas. We will only share information that has been aggregated (that is, joined together with information from others before sharing to ensure anonymisation.

    How may my child’s information and samples be shared in the future?

    We will ask you to consider sharing your child’s information, including their saliva sample if they provide one, for future research. Sharing information with others can help make all research more effective. 

    When we share your child’s information and samples, we will take steps to make it difficult for anyone to link the information back to your child. This includes removing information that could easily identify your child, like their name or contact information. There is still a very small chance that someone could identify your child again.

    If you agree, we may share their information and samples for research that is very similar to this project. They may work for a commercial organization like a pharmaceutical company or medical device company.

    By agreeing to participate in this study, your child agrees to us sharing their information and samples. However, they will not be told about the future research projects.

    If they change their mind, they have the option to ask us to stop sharing their information and samples. However, if their information or samples have already been shared, it may not be possible to retrieve or destroy them.

    Who is running and paying for this project?

    This project is being run by Orygen, Centre for Youth Mental Health at the University of Melbourne.

    This project is being funded by NHMRC Investigator Grant L1 2017962 awarded to Prof. Lianne Schmaal

    Who has approved this project?

    The University of Melbourne Human Ethics Research Committee has approved this project. This committee makes sure that this project meets Australian ethical standards for research that involves people.

    Complaints about how this project is being run

    If you have any complaints about how this project is being run, please contact:

    Role: Research Integrity Officer, Office of Research Ethics and Integrity, University of Melbourne.

    Contact: research-integrity@unimelb.edu.au

    Phone number: +61 3 8344 1376

    What happens if something goes wrong?

    In an emergency, you should call 000 or go to the emergency department at your nearest hospital. If your child’s injury is not urgent, you should contact us. We can help you organise medical care.

    Where can I find more information?

    Thank you for taking the time to read this information about our project. You can contact a member of the project team at any time to ask questions.

    Name: Dr. Chloe Love      
    Role: Project Manager        
    Contact number: 0437 541 890
    Contact email: contact@identifyd.org.au

    General Study Email Address:            
    contact@identifyd.org.au

    By signing this consent form, I acknowledge that:

    • I freely agree to take part in this project
    • I certify that the information I have provided is correct
    • I agree to my information and samples being collected, stored and shared for future research related to this project
    • I understand that I can stop taking part in the project at any time
    • I have read, or have had read to me, the information provided about this project and understand what is involved
    • I have had the opportunity to consider the information, ask questions and am satisfied with the answers I received

    Please indicate your consent for the following optional parts of the project (only if your child also consents):

    I agree for my child to participate in the genetic assessment by providing a saliva sample(Required)
    I agree for my child to participate in the daily surveys via an application on their smart phone(Required)
    I give permission for my child's data from AIHW NHDH and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services to be accessed for the purposes of this project(Required)
    I agree to my child being contacted by Orygen researchers about participation in other projects, during this project and after their participation in this project is complete(Required)
    I agree to my child being contacted by Orygen about opportunities to provide their perspective about this project or about research participation more generally(Required)
    Clear Signature
    DD slash MM slash YYYY

    You require your parents consent to participate as well. This is the consent form for them to read and sign. If your parents are not available at the moment you can save the form at the bottom and continue the process when they are ready.


    Parent/Guardian Consent form

    Short Name of Project IDENTIFYD
    Full Name of Project IDENTIFying the risk of recurrent and chronic Youth Depression (IDENTIFYD): A prospective longitudinal cohort study
    Principal Investigator Professor Lianne Schmaal
    Project Sponsor Orygen
    Site Name headspace National

    What am I being invited to do?

    We, the Orygen Mood Research Team, invite your child to take part in a project that is trying to identify the risk factors that contribute to young people experiencing long term or repeated depression. Your child has been invited to take part because your child is a young person between 15 and 25 years old, who is a client of headspace with an experience of depression, and you have indicated you may be interested in participating in this study.

    Around 3000 young people will take part in this project. They will be clients of any headspace centre in Australia.

    Please read this information and feel free to ask any questions. You can take some time to make up your mind and decide if this project is right for you. You can also talk to someone you trust, like a family member, friend, or your local doctor.

    What is the purpose of this project?

    In this project, our aim is to create a tool to identify young people who are at risk of experiencing long‑term or repeated depression. This tool is called a ‘risk calculator’. The tool will consider a wide range of aspects of a young person’s life, including clinical, medical and pharmaceutical history (optional), cognitive, psychological, and social factors that are linked to depression (see a visual representation of this in figure 1 below).

    Figure 1: Factors in repeated or long-term depression

    As well, the study is interested in identifying factors that impact young people’s recovery from depression, and development of other mental health concerns (such as anxiety).

    Your child can participate in genetic testing by providing a saliva sample. This will help us to identify genetic factors linked to depression, offering insights into its causes, risk factors, and potential personalised treatments.

    Do I have to take part and can I change my mind?

    Taking part is up to you and your child

    You and your child get to decide whether your child will take part in this project. You can say yes or no.

    Your decision won’t affect your relationship with your headspace clinician or the research team at Orygen, or headspace, or Orygen. If you don’t take part, your engagement with headspace will continue as normal.

    You can change your mind at any time

    If your child does take part, they can stop at any time. If your child wants to stop, you or your child should tell someone in the project team. Your child does not have to tell us the reason.

    Once your child stops taking part, we will not collect any more information about them. We will keep the information we have already collected to make sure the results of the project can be measured properly.

    The project might stop for other reasons

    We might need to stop the project while your child is taking part. If this happens, we will explain the reasons to you and your child.

    We may also ask your child to stop taking part in the project if it is no longer in their best interest. If this happens, we will discuss this with you and your child.

    What does my child have to do if they take part?

    If your child takes part in this project, they will be in it for 18 months from the time the your child complete the first assessment. This table below outlines what your child needs to do in this project. For more information, please ask a member of the project team.

    Your child will be reimbursed for the participation. More detail about reimbursement is found later in this document.

    The main component of the study involves completion of online surveys across 18 months. These surveys contain a variety of questionnaires asking questions about your child’s life circumstances, lifestyle, sleep habits, mood symptoms, strange thoughts, suicidal thoughts and behaviours, eating disorders, personality, physical pain symptoms, memory and attention. If an individual under the age of 18 exhibits indications of active suicidality, their parents or legal guardians will be informed.

    If you and your child consent to participate they will be asked to complete 10 online surveys over a period of 18 months (see visual representation of this in figure 2 below). Once your child is enrolled in the study, they will receive an online baseline survey, which will take approximately 2 hours to complete. Following, the baseline survey, your child will receive 15-minute surveys every 2 months through the study period of 18 months

    The 6-, 12-, and 18-month surveys will have a few additional questions and are expected to take 30 minutes in total to complete. The online surveys can be completed either on a computer, tablet, or mobile phone.

    Up to 690 participants will also be contacted to recruit a random sample of up to 276 participants to to complete a questionnaire about depression and anxiety over the phone or via videoconferencing with a research team member. It is expected this would take up to 60 minutes to complete. Contact will occur at baseline and at 6 month follow up, with a total of 138 participants required for each time point. If your child is randomly selected, you can decline to participate without it effecting their involvement in any other aspects of the study. There are also three additional optional components of the study, which are described below.

    Optional component 1: Brief daily survey on your smartphone.

    Your child will have the option to participate in short (2-3 minute) daily surveys that will ask some questions about what they are doing, what they are thinking and how your child is feeling. To do this you will need to install an application called mPATH on their mobile phone. Surveys are sent once daily. Your child can also request that the frequency with which they receive the surveys is reduced for certain periods of time throughout the study, or to pause them completely for a period, if they would like a break from it. The application mPATH is owned by a Belgium Company called M-PATH Software and we license it from them. M-PATH Software will only receive deidentified data about your child. M-PATH Software may use that data to improve and further develop the software and the m-Path services and only can process the information as strictly as necessary for its purposes

    Choosing not to participate in optional component 1 or withdrawing from optional component 1 does not stop your child from participating in the main study or optional component 2 or optional component 3.

    Optional component 2: Genetic assessment via saliva sample

    Your child also has the option to participate in genetic testing by providing us with a saliva sample

    What is genetic epidemiological research?

    Genes are made of DNA – the chemical structure carrying your genetic information that determines many human characteristics such as the colour of your eyes or hair. Researchers study genes to understand why some people have a certain condition such as depression and why some people do not. Understanding a person’s genes may also explain why some people respond to a treatment while others don’t, or why some people experience side effects and others don’t.

    If you and your child consent to this, you will be sent a saliva test kit with all required materials and instructions and a pre-paid return post envelope. Your child will be required to post the sample back to the study co investigators at the University of Queensland via the pre-paid return post envelope (at no cost to you). You or your child will be able to contact a member of the research team if you need any help or advice about completing the process. We will extract your child’s DNA from your sample to investigate genetic risk factors for depression and medication response. Due to the nature of the analysis, we will not be able to provide the results from these tests.

    Choosing not to participate in optional component 2 or withdrawing from optional component 2 does not stop your child from participating in the main study or optional component 1.

    Optional component 3: Access to Medicare and Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedule information

    Australian Institute of Health and Welfare National Health Database Hub, and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services.

    To also help determine the cost to society of peoples experience of mental health concerns, as well as to explore other factors that may help understand outcomes related to depression the team will seek to access your child’s information that is available from the National Health Data Hub (NHDH) via the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), and your information that is available from the ambulance service in your state.

    The NHDH is an enduring linked data system that provides information from a variety of databases across Australian states and territories. If, you provide consent to this, the research team would provide your child’s information to the AIHW NHDH team in a secure manner, and they then provide the research team with your relevant data in a deidentified manner via a secure online portal.

    For State Based Ambulance Services data, researchers will provide your child’s information to the relevant members of the ambulance service, and they will provide your data back to the research team in a secure and identifiable manner. The research team will then take responsibility for ensuring only authorised study members have access to the information in an identifiable form, and will only present your child’s data publicly in a de-identified manner.

    Choosing not to participate in optional component 3 or withdrawing from optional component 3 does not stop your child from participating in the main study or optional component 1.



    This table below outlines what your child needs to do in this project. For more information, please ask a member of the project team via the study’s email address contact@identifyd.org.au. contact@identifyd.org.au.

    What part of the project? What do your child has to do? Expected Time Length Requirement Reimbursement
    Review Study Materials Please watch each of the videos on the study website and read the participant information and consent form. 30 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $0
    Consenting to take part in this project If you are happy with your child joining in on this project, we will need you to sign a parental consent form. 5 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $0
    Baseline Assessment After you have consented your chilld will be sent a link to the first online survey. This is called a baseline assessment and is considerably longer than the other surveys you will be asked to complete. 2 Hours Internet access, access to web browser Up to $60 If you complete at least 80% of the baseline assessment
    Assessments every two months (Month 2, 4, 8, 10, 14, 16) Every two months your child will be sent a survey asking about a few different aspects of how you are going. 15 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $7.50 and the possibility of entry into a draw to win one of two iPads ( dependent on completion rate of bi monthly and 6 monthly assessments)).
    Assessments every 6 months
    (Months 6,12,18)
    Every six months your child will be sent a survey that is the same as the one at two months, but with some extra questions. 30 minutes Internet access, access to web browser $15 and the possibility of entry into a draw to win one of two iPads ( dependent on completion rate of bi monthly and 6 monthly assessments).
    Clinician Administration of depression and anxiety measures Up to n = 276 participants will be randomly selected. 60 minutes Telephone, videoconference $30
    Optional Saliva Assessment If your child chooses to participate in the optional saliva assessment, they will be mailed a kit that will allow you to provide a saliva sample, and will include a pre-paid return addressed envelope for your child to send the sample back to our laboratory in Queensland. 30 minutes Access to post office to return sample $35
    Optional Daily Surveys If your child choose to participate in the optional daily surveys, they will need to install an application on your phone and then complete the surveys as they are sent to your child daily. 2 – 3 minutes per day Smart phone with internet access to receive and complete surveys Up to $82 and thepossibility of entering draws that could result in winning three of nine $100 gift cards.
    Optional access to data available from the Australian Institute of Welfare National Data Hub and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services Data If you provide consent to do this we will access your child’s data that is available from the AIHW National Health Data Hub, and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services. N/A N/A N/A

    Payment for your child’s time and expenses

    Reimbursement will be as follows:

    • For completion of the main study online surveys, your child will be reimbursed at the rate of $30 per hour for all survey completion (maximum $150). They will be paid every 6 months the total amount you have accrued based on the number of assessments you have completed over the 6-month period.
      • If you complete 80% of the main study surveys over the 18-month period, your child will go into the running to win one of two iPads.
    • If you are randomly selected to participate in the clinician administered depression and anxiety questionnaires and you choose to complete them, you will be reimbursed $30 for completing them.
    • If your child participate in the optional daily assessments, they are reimbursed for the 2 to 3-minute daily surveys for a total of $82.00 by the end of the study if complete 60 – 80% surveys are completed. Your child will be paid every 6 months the total amount they have accrued based on the number of assessments completed over the 6-month period.
      • Depending on your child’s completion rate of the optional daily assessment surveys, they may go into the running to win up to three of nine $100 gift vouchers.
    • If your child participates in the optional genetic testing, they will be reimbursed $30 for completing and returning the saliva sample. They will be paid after we have received the sample.
    • The reimbursement will be directly deposited into the provided bank account and gift vouchers will be sent through their email accounts.

    What are the benefits of taking part?

    Your child may not directly benefit from taking part in this project. By taking part, your child will help the researchers understand more about factors that contribute to young people experiencing long term or repeated depression. This knowledge may help people in the future.

    There are potential risks to your child from participating in this project.

    What are the risks and discomforts of taking part?

    There are potential risks to your child from participating in this project.

    Suicidal thoughts and behaviour:

    In this study, we’ll ask your child about suicidal thoughts and behaviours. However, these assessments aren’t monitored in real time, and we’re unable to provide immediate clinical support. If your child has experienced or is experiencing suicidal thoughts and behaviours during a study assessment, please encourage them to contact mental health services, visit the local emergency department, or call emergency services. At the start of each survey, your child will automatically be presented with a list of support services they can reach out to:

    • For immediate or emergency support, they can call 000 or go to the nearest emergency department.
    • Kids Helpline offers free 24/7 phone and online counselling for children aged 5 to 25 years at 1800 55 1800.
    • Lifeline provides free 24/7 online and phone crisis support at 13 11 14.
    • Suicide Call Back Service offers free 24/7 phone and online counselling and crisis support at 1300 659 467.
    • eheadspace provides free phone, chat, and email counselling for young people aged between 12 and 25, available seven days a week from 9am to 1am AEST, at 1800 650 890 or eheadspace.org.au.
    • Qlife provides phone and online support for LGBTQIA+ individuals from 3pm to midnight every day at 1800 184 527.
    • For those impacted by sexual assault or domestic violence, 1800 RESPECT offers free and confidential phone and online counselling and support 24/7 at 1800 737 732.

    If your child responds in a manner to questions about suicidal thoughts and behaviour that may indicate they are at risk, they will be notified during the survey and a member of the study team will contact them within 48 hours of completing the assessment, providing details of crisis services.

    Chance of distress:

    The surveys your child completes as part of the main study may ask about various experiences and emotions, which could affect their mood. It is possible these surveys may cause distress. If this occurs, your child can take a break from or stop the survey at any time. They can then resume the survey later or choose not to complete it altogether. They can also choose to withdraw from the study entirely. If your child becomes distressed due to their participation, they can contact the following services:

    • Lifeline: 13 11 14 (available 24/7)
    • Beyondblue: 1300 22 4636 (available 24/7)
    • Kids Helpline: 1800 55 1800 (available 24/7)
    • e-headspace: https://www.eheadspace.org.au (available 9am-1am Melbourne time, every day)

    If my child takes part, what will happen to their information and samples?

    Collecting your child’s information

    We will collect information for the project directly from your child.

    We will also collect information for this project from other services if you and your child allow us to. The information will be linked to a unique code, also known as an identification number, for them. This de-identifies their data, allowing it to be analysed and shared in an anonymous manner. We will not link their identification number to their name or contact information.

    Data collected during this study may also be stored in the Cloud, which refers to servers in a data center, managed by a third party and accessible through the internet. When storing information in the cloud, we will replace their name with a participant code. Coded data will be encrypted and stored on a secure Cloud server to prevent improper access.

    If you and your child consents to the optional component of allowing us to access their Medicare and pharmaceutical benefits scheme information, we will access them as described in the table below:

    Where will we get your child information from (optional) What kind of information we will get Who is responsible for the information
    AIHW NHDH Your child’s usage of various datasets available for national linkage Australian Federal Government
    State and territory-based ambulance services Your child’s usage of ambulance services Australian State Governments

    For this project we are asking participants to provide a type of consent called ‘extended consent’. Extended consent is where the data in this project can be used for future research projects related to this research project, that will benefit young people with depression and mental health conditions. The data will only be used in a de-identified way and researchers will not have access to your personalised data.

    Keeping your child’s information safe

    To keep your child’s information safe, we will:

    • follow all relevant privacy requirements
    • keep it securely on an electronic database
    • take steps to prevent anyone from accessing information that identifies your child unless they need to, for example, to check it in an audit
    • give it a code and keep it separate from anything that could easily identify your child, like your child’s name or contact information.

    The young person’s information is confidential and will not be shared. If your child’s information is not correct, you can also ask us to change it. We will keep your child’s information for 15 years after your child turn 18, or for 15 years after the study completes. After this, we will destroy it.  

    Keeping your child’s samples safe

    We will keep your child’s saliva sample safe by:

    • keeping them securely at location
    • giving them a code and keeping them separate from anything that could easily identify your child, like their name or contact information.

    We will keep any leftover samples that have not been used up in the project for 15 years after your child turn 18, or 15 years after the study completes. After this, we will destroy them.

    Sharing your child’s information with others

    We will only share your information with others, if required to by law.

    We will share some of your child’s information with others.

    • Legal requirements to share your child’s information: some information needs to be shared with others by law.

    If, during the interview, your child discloses information about past trauma or abuse that leads us to believe someone else may be in danger, we may need to act. This could involve contacting government authorities such as the Victorian Department of Families, Fairness and Housing or the NSW Child Protection Helpline about risk to children under the age of 17 years. Mandatory reporting laws oblige psychologists and doctors to report any suspected cases of child abuse or neglect to government authorities (as per the Children, Youth and Families Act 2005 in Victoria and the Children and Young Persons Care and Protection, Act 1998 in NSW). If abuse is reported, the information collected by researchers will be shared with their clinical team, and standard clinical procedures within their service will be followed. This may entail reporting the abuse to government authorities or other support services. We will make every effort to discuss this with you beforehand.

    This research project involves gathering information on drug usage. Please be aware that the use, possession, or distribution of methamphetamines is illegal in Victoria and other Australian jurisdictions. While we typically won’t disclose your child’s information without consent, there may be rare instances where we are obligated to do so for legal purposes. For instance, such information might be relevant in criminal investigations, Family Court proceedings, child protection cases, matters before the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal, or inquests.

    Please refrain from disclosing specifics about events or activities, such as crimes your child hasn’t been charged with or hasn’t faced court proceedings for. We do not require, nor have we ever been legally compelled, to provide our research data to others for legal reasons. However, should such a situation arise, we will endeavor to inform you before disclosing any information.

    Upon completion of the study, all data linking participants’ drug use to identifiable information will be deleted. This ensures that in the long term, no data capable of identifying your child regarding drug use will be retained.

    While there is a very minimal risk that this information may be requested by a court before the study’s conclusion, such occurrences are exceedingly rare and have not happened in our or our colleagues’ experience over the last 25 years. If a court does request information, we will petition the court to withhold releasing information that could identify your child.

    • Sharing information with other researchers: we will share certain information from this project so that other researchers can use it in the future. These researchers may be in Australia or overseas. We will only share information that has been aggregated (that is, joined together with information from others before sharing to ensure anonymisation.

    How may my child’s information and samples be shared in the future?

    We will ask you to consider sharing your child’s information, including their saliva sample if they provide one, for future research. Sharing information with others can help make all research more effective. 

    When we share your child’s information and samples, we will take steps to make it difficult for anyone to link the information back to your child. This includes removing information that could easily identify your child, like their name or contact information. There is still a very small chance that someone could identify your child again

    If you agree, we may share their information and samples for research that is very similar to this project. They may work for a commercial organization like a pharmaceutical company or medical device company.

    By agreeing to participate in this study, your child agrees to us sharing their information and samples. However, they will not be told about the future research projects.

    If they change their mind, they have the option to ask us to stop sharing their information and samples. However, if their information or samples have already been shared, it may not be possible to retrieve or destroy them.

    Who is running and paying for this project?

    This project is being run by Orygen, Centre for Youth Mental Health at the University of Melbourne.

    This project is being funded by NHMRC Investigator Grant L1 2017962 awarded to Prof. Lianne Schmaal

    Who has approved this project?

    The University of Melbourne Human Ethics Research Committee has approved this project. This committee makes sure that this project meets Australian ethical standards for research that involves people.

    Complaints about how this project is being run

    If you have any complaints about how this project is being run, please contact:

    Role: Research Integrity Officer, Office of Research Ethics and Integrity, University of Melbourne.

    Contact: research-integrity@unimelb.edu.au

    Phone number: +61 3 8344 1376

    What happens if something goes wrong?

    In an emergency, you should call 000 or go to the emergency department at your nearest hospital. If your child’s injury is not urgent, you should contact us. We can help you organise medical care.

    Where can I find more information?

    Thank you for taking the time to read this information about our project. You can contact a member of the project team at any time to ask questions.

    Phone: 0437 541 890
    Email: contact@identifyd.org.au

    Please indicate your consent for the following optional parts of the project (only if your child also consents):

    I agree for my child to participate in the genetic assessment by providing a saliva sample(Required)
    I agree for my child to participate in the daily surveys via an application on their smart phone(Required)
    I give permission for my child's data from AIHW NHDH and State and Territory Based Ambulance Services to be accessed for the purposes of this project(Required)
    I agree to my child being contacted by Orygen researchers about participation in other projects, during this project and after their participation in this project is complete(Required)
    I agree to my child being contacted by Orygen about opportunities to provide their perspective about this project or about research participation more generally(Required)
    Clear Signature
    DD slash MM slash YYYY

    Click the 'Submit' button below to finish. The study team thanks you for your time.

    Orygen

    Working with young people, our partners and one another, we’re redefining what’s possible in global youth mental health research, policy, education and clinical care.

    Help & Information
    • About
    • Contact

    © 2026 Orygen Identifyd Study - Built by Middleshelf Studios

    • Click here to see if you’re eligible