EAGLE Study: Physical Distancing and Health Outcomes in Immunocompromised Adolescents
by Paul Williams·Updated 8d ago
705.1 KB1files
Available on 1 platform
Sign in to view source links and access this dataset
Description
The EAGLE study provides cross-sectional survey data from 405 immunocompromised adolescents in the U.S. and U.K., collected between February and June 2023. It captures physical distancing behaviors, health-related quality of life, loneliness, mental health, and school impairment. The dataset was authored by Paul Williams and published on figshare under a CC-BY-4.0 license.
Use Cases
Analyze correlations between physical distancing intensity and health-related quality of life scores.
Model the association between COVID-19 avoidance behaviors and school or activity impairment metrics.
Investigate mental health outcomes, such as anxiety and depression, in relation to loneliness and physical distancing.
Strengths
Includes data from 405 immunocompromised adolescents, a specific and vulnerable population.
Uses multiple validated instruments, including the PDS-C19, PedsQL, HADS, and EQ-5D-5L scales.
Reports specific statistical results, such as a mean PDS-C19 T-score of 49.1 and a mean PedsQL total score of 58.0.
Limitations
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Data is contained in a 705.1 KB PDF file, which may require extraction for analysis.
Provenance
Source
figshare
Collection Method
Web-based survey administered to adolescents and their caregivers as part of the cross-sectional observational EAGLE study.
Time Range
Data collected between February and June 2023.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-05-28 05:58:10; freshness should be verified.
Geography
United States and United Kingdom.
Primary data is embedded within a PDF report; users may need to extract tabular data manually.