INTINN YOUTH FILM & MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAMME Cork International Film Festival is Irelandâs first and largest film festival and celebrates its 67th edition in November 2022. This year, with the valued support of ESB Energy for Generations Fund, the Festival continues to grow Intinn, its successful Film and Mental Health programme for Transition Year students. We are delighted that you have chosen to participate in this programme with your students. Meaning âmindâ or âway of thinkingâ, the Intinn programme has grown from 300 students participating in person in Cork in its pilot in 2019 to over 4,500 students participating in over 50 schools in person in Cork and throughout Ireland online over 2020 and 2021.
INTINN: AN EVIDENCE-BASED PROGRAMME In spring 2021, the Intinn programme also provided a unique opportunity to gather essential research on the impacts of this flagship education programme on TY and Senior Cycle students and their teachers, the results of which have contributed to a Report by UCCâs School of Nursing and Midwifery. The findings from the study, led by Dr. Johnny Goodwin, are currently under peer review, and have been presented at various national (Association for Teacher Education in Europeâs Spring Conference) and international (International Association for Youth Mental Healthâs Sixth International Conference on Youth Mental Health). Students (n=101) from across Ireland completed surveys before and after engaging in Intinn. Students completed surveys on wellbeing, resilience, attitudes towards help-seeking (for personal and emotional problems and suicidal ideation), stigma, and knowledge about mental health. In the post-intervention survey, student participants were also invited to comment about the Intinn programme in free-text boxes. Teachers who facilitated Intinn were also given the opportunity to engage in individual semi-structured interviews. Overall, Intinn was well received by student participants who described it as âworthwhileâ and âenjoyableâ. Post-intervention, there was a statistically significant increase in personal resilience, attitudes towards help-seeking for personal and emotional problems and suicidal ideation. There was also a statistically significant increase in wellbeing scores post-intervention. In the free-text comments, student participants indicated improvements in their understanding of mental health, their awareness of stigma, and the prevalence of mental distress. They also commented on Intinnâs invaluable contribution in enhancing self-awareness around their own mental health, and that it promoted communication, allowing them to become comfortable talking with each other about mental health and their future wellbeing.