| Literature DB >> 28253879 |
M C Barnes1, J L Donovan2, C Wilson2, J Chatwin3, R Davies2, J Potokar2, N Kapur4, K Hawton5, R O'Connor6, D Gunnell2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Economic recessions are often accompanied by increased levels of psychological distress and suicidal behaviour in affected populations. Little is known about the experiences of people seeking help for employment, financial and benefit-related difficulties during recessions. We investigated the experiences of people struggling financially in the aftermath of the Great Recession (2008-9) - including some who had self-harmed - and of the frontline support staff providing assistance.Entities:
Keywords: Experiences; Help-seeking; Mental health; Need; Qualitative; Recession; Self-harm; Services
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28253879 PMCID: PMC5335839 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-017-1235-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Organisations from which service provider staff were recruited and numbers of interviews conducted
| Organisation | Number of staff interviews or focus groups |
|---|---|
| Samaritans (City 1) | 1 |
| Samaritans outreach team (City 1) | 1 focus group ( |
| Samaritans (City 2) | 1 |
| Housing association (City 1) | 2 |
| Psychological therapies provider (City 1) | 1 |
| Psychiatric Liaison Team (hospital City 1) | 2 |
| Debt advice centre (City 1) | 1 focus group ( |
| Union (City 1) | 2 |
| Support for people with MHP/learning disabilities (City 1) | 1 |
| Job Centre (City 1) | 3 |
| Job Centre (City 2) | 2 |
Characteristics of the clinical (participants who had self-harmed) and community sample of participants and common services accessed
| Clinical ( | Community ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic characteristics | ||
| Gender | ||
| Male | 9 (47%) | 11 (50%) |
| Female | 10 (52%) | 11 (50%) |
| Age group | ||
| Under 30 | 5 (26%) | 8 (36%) |
| 31-40 | 5 (26%) | 2 (9%) |
| 41-50 | 5 (26%) | 5 (23%) |
| 51-60 | 4 (22%) | 7 (32%) |
| Employment status | ||
| Employed | 6 (32%) | 8 (36%) |
| Unemployed: receiving Employment Support Allowance (ESA) | 7 (37%) | 1 (5%) |
| Unemployed: receiving Job-seekers Allowance (JSA) | 5 (26%) | 11 (50%) |
| Other (carer, income support) | 1 (5%) | 2 (9%) |
| Housing | ||
| Type of housing | ||
| Social housing | 6 (32%) | 9 (41%) |
| Private rental | 5 (26% | 4 (18%) |
| Lives with parents | 4 (21%) | 2 (9%) |
| Owns home/paying mortgage | 3 (16%) | 6 (27%) |
| Other (hostel/staying with friends) | 1 (5%) | 1 (5%) |
| Living with | ||
| Family (1+ member of immediate family) | 5 (26%) | 10 (45%) |
| Partner | 6 (32%) | 4 (18%) |
| Alone | 7 (37%) | 7 (32%) |
| Other | 1 (5%) | 1 (5%) |
| Services accessed | ||
| Job Centre/benefits agencies | 14 (74%) | 13 (59%) |
| Free debt advice/CAB/MIND | 5 (26%) | 13 (59%) |
| Health services (GP/Counselling) | 16 (84%) | 19 (86%) |
| Suicide intent scores | ||
| 0-6 (low intent) | 0 | |
| 7-12 (moderate intent) | 9 | |
| 13-20 (high intent) | 8 | |
| > 20 (very high intent) | 2 | |
| Previous self-harm | ||
| Yes | 14 | |
| No | 5 | |
Summary of main themes and findings
| Themes and Subthemes | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Theme 1 Service Provision | Theme 2: Informal Support | Theme 3: Unmet Need Sub-themes: | Theme 3: Mental Health |
| Sub-themes: | |||
| -Employment and benefit agencies | Practical Guidance through system | ||
| -Independent/charity services | -Benefit and debt information | ||
| -Health services | -Co-ordinated services | ||
| Main findings within each theme | |||
| Most participants highlighted that accessing services could be difficult | Participants who had self-harmed reported fewer sources of support, and less supportive social networks than the community sample. | All groups indicated that practical help for financial and benefit issues would have helped/would help – especially the clinical group. | Participants who had self-harmed reported a stronger belief that they should be self-reliant in the face of economic and mental health difficulties than the community sample. |
| Free debt advice, when it could be accessed, was considered the most useful service | Participants who had self-harmed reported more difficult circumstances such as benefits changes or sanctions. | All groups wanted straightforward and clear information about services available and how to access them. Co-ordination between services would help. | |
| The community sample reported more knowledge of how to access debt advice (as expected) than the participants who had self-harmed – although both groups had sought similar types of help | All groups felt that help for current and past mental, emotional and physical difficulties was necessary | ||
Implications for policy
| Locally |
| • Local authorities should regularly update information on the sources of advice available for those experiencing economic hardship in the area, providing all sectors with regularly revised updates of paper or web-based summaries of these |
| • Practical help could be made available to help people decipher official information and guiding them to voluntary/statutory sector agencies |
| • Employers making redundancies could pass on information on local support agencies to at-risk employees. |
| Nationally |
| • Written communications from DWP/Job Centres could involve service users proof reading the text to make it more understandable |
| • Strategies to address the mental health impacts of recession and debt need to appreciate men’s (and some women’s) unwillingness to talk about problems and seek help |
| • Increase resources to statutory and non-statutory organisation providing help for people affected by economic downturns including training front line staff in recognising and responding to emotional distress due to financial concerns. |
| • Mental Health First Aid training could be given to all front-line staff |
| • Clinicians may also benefit from training in recognising financial and employment issues and referring on to the best support. |