Literature DB >> 12883057

Psychosocial factors and public health: a suitable case for treatment?

J Macleod1, G Davey Smith.   

Abstract

Adverse psychosocial exposure or "misery" is associated with physical disease. This association may not be causal. Rather it may reflect issues of reverse causation, reporting bias, and confounding by aspects of the material environment typically associated with misery. A non-causal relation will not form the basis of effective public health interventions. This may be why psychosocial interventions have, so far, showed little effect on objective physical health outcomes. This paper reviews evidence for the "psychosocial hypothesis" and suggests strategies for clarifying these issues. It concludes that, although misery is clearly a bad thing as it erodes people's quality of life, there is little evidence that psychosocial factors cause physical disease. In the absence of better evidence, suggestions that psychosocial interventions are needed to improve population physical health, in both absolute and relative terms, seem premature.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12883057      PMCID: PMC1732553          DOI: 10.1136/jech.57.8.565

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health        ISSN: 0143-005X            Impact factor:   3.710


  50 in total

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  44 in total

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5.  Material, psychosocial, and behavioural factors in the explanation of educational inequalities in mortality in The Netherlands.

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7.  Social class and mental health: testing exploitation as a relational determinant of depression.

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Review 8.  Effects of stress on the development and progression of cardiovascular disease.

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9.  Occupational position and its relation to mental distress in a random sample of Danish residents.

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10.  More evidence that depressive symptoms predict mortality in COPD patients: is type D personality an alternative explanation?

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