Literature DB >> 20943994

Mental health among the unemployed and the unemployment rate in the municipality.

Mattias Strandh1, Mehmed Novo, Anne Hammarström.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous research has shown that unemployment experiences increase the risk of poor mental health and that this effect differs depending on individual characteristics. Relatively little is known, however, about how the unemployment rate and labour market conditions impact the relationship. This study investigates how municipal unemployment rates and vacancy rates affect mental health in a nationally representative longitudinal survey of initially unemployed Swedish respondents.
METHODS: The study uses a nationally representative longitudinal survey of currently and recently unemployed people in Sweden, in which respondents were re-interviewed one year after the initial interview. Mental health was measured using the GHQ-12. The present article uses multilevel models (hierarchical linear models) to combine municipal-level information on unemployment levels and vacancy rates with individual-level control variables.
RESULTS: Higher municipal vacancy rates improved mental health among the unemployed. However, no coherent effect of municipal unemployment rate on the relationship between unemployment and mental health was found.
CONCLUSIONS: The effect of municipal vacancy rates can be understood in terms of the impact of perceived opportunity on the sense of life-course predictability. That there was no effect of municipal unemployment rate indicates that high local unemployment levels do not reduce the sense of shame and perceived stigma among the unemployed. Taken together, our findings would seem to present a rather bleak picture of the current dramatic labour market situation. The unemployed will be negatively affected by the extremely low demand for labour, while they will not be able to take comfort from their growing numbers.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20943994     DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckq147

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Public Health        ISSN: 1101-1262            Impact factor:   3.367


  8 in total

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2.  Long-term effects of youth unemployment on mental health: does an economic crisis make a difference?

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4.  The interplay between national and parental unemployment in relation to adolescent life satisfaction in 27 countries: analyses of repeated cross-sectional school surveys.

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5.  Women's Family Care Responsibilities, Employment and Health: A Tale of Two Countries.

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6.  Employment status and perceived health condition: longitudinal data from Italy.

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7.  Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health--a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment.

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Review 8.  Mental health outcomes in times of economic recession: a systematic literature review.

Authors:  Diana Frasquilho; Margarida Gaspar Matos; Ferdinand Salonna; Diogo Guerreiro; Cláudia C Storti; Tânia Gaspar; José M Caldas-de-Almeida
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  8 in total

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