| Literature DB >> 30522502 |
A McAllister1, S Fritzell2,3, M Almroth2, L Harber-Aschan2, S Larsson2, B Burström2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Europe and elsewhere there is rising concern about inequality in health and increased prevalence of mental ill-health. Structural determinants such as welfare state arrangements may impact on levels of mental health and social inequalities. This systematic review aims to assess the current evidence on whether structural determinants are associated with inequalities in mental health outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Equity; Gender; Inequalities; Mental health; Socio-economic; Structural determinants; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30522502 PMCID: PMC6284306 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-018-0879-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Policy domains and examples
| Policy domain | Explanation and examples |
|---|---|
| 1. Welfare state | Typologies of welfare states, based on family policy, social policy or other dimensions. |
| 2. Family policy | Levels of benefits, changes in eligibility, coverage, public daycare, custody laws, parental leave. |
| 3. Employment policy | Minimum wage, flexibility, precariousness, tax-credits/subsidies, active labour market policies, employment protection legislation, anti-discrimination law, strength of unions. |
| 4. Income support and social insurance | Levels of benefits (including unemployment), changes in eligibility, coverage. |
| 5. Area-based initiatives | Affordable housing, availability, subsidies, regulations on eviction, quality of housing, neighbourhood renewal. |
| 6. Education (at all levels) | Affordability, access, developmental support. |
Data items from each article
| Article information | Author, year, aim, setting (i.e. country) |
|---|---|
| Characteristics of study | Study population, sample size, method of data collection and year(s) covered |
| Exposures | Policy domains (1–6), policy sub-area, name of policy |
| Outcome measures | Mental health aspect, mental health (validated) measurement used, type of inequality |
| Inequality measure | Assessed socio-economic status or gender inequality (increase/decrease/neutral) |
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram [15]
Summary of results
| Article | Aim | Study population (sample size); Study design; Country | Policy sub-area | MH aspect | Type of inequality assessed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Policy domain – Welfare States | |||||
| Artazcoz L, Cortès I | Analyse the relationship between health status, paid working hours and household composition across family policy typologies. | 25–64 years (only those employed and partnered) | Family policy | Mental well-being | Focus: Gender inequalities (Korpi’s welfare regime typology) |
| De Moortel D, Palència L | Investigate across welfare regimes, the association between neo-Marxian social class (NMSC) and employee mental well-being and identify any gender differences. | 15–65 years | Employment, social insurance and gender policies | Mental well-being | Focus: Gender and SES inequalities (NMCS) (Korpi’s welfare regime typology) |
| De Moortel D, Vandenheede H | Assess whether measures of employment quality are related to mental well-being and if this relationship differs by gender and across different welfare models. | 15–65 years employed | Employment conditions | Mental well-being | Focus: Gender inequalities (Korpi’s welfare regime typology) |
| Niedzwiedz CL, Mitchell RJ | Investigate whether spending on 3 types of social protection (unemployment, ALMPs, family) influences social inequality in depressive symptoms. | 20–64 years | Unemployment, ALMPs, family policy | Depression | Focus: SES inequalities |
| Nordenmark M, Strandh M | Investigate the impact of unemployment benefit system for mental well-being in different welfare regimes. | Unemployed persons | Unemployment benefits | Mental distress | Focus: SES inequalities (Esping-Andersen’s weflare typology) |
| Sekine M, Chandola T | Investigate socio-economic differences in work characteristics and health in Finland, Japan and the UK. | 40–60 years (civil servants) | Employment conditions and work characteristics | Mental health functioning | Focus: SES inequalities |
| Sekine M, Tatsuse T | Investigate whether work characteristics contribute to sex inequalities in health in liberal, social democratic and conservative welfare states. | 40–60 years (civil servants) | Employment conditions and work characteristics | Mental health functioning | Focus: Gender inequalities |
| Van de Velde S, Bambra C | Examine whether there are smaller inequalities between lone and cohabitating mothers in welfare regimes with higher levels of universalism and policies targeted at defamilising. | Women 18–55 years w/ children aged 18 years or younger ( | Unemployment, family policy | Depression | Focus: Gender inequalities (Ferrera’s welfare typology) and SES |
| Yur’yev A, Värnik A | Assess the relationship between suicide mortality and social expenditure. | European countries; ( | Social expenditure | Suicide | Focus: No explicit inequality focus but analysis is stratified by sex |
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| Chandola T, Martikainen P | Examine whether welfare states with more family friendly workplace policies mitigates the effect of work and family conflict on mental health and whether there are differences between men and women. | Employed aged 35–60 years | Family-friendly workplace policies | Mental health functioning | Focus: Gender inequalities |
| Hewitt B, Strazdins L | Investigate the health effects of the introduction of a new universal paid parental leave (PPL) scheme in Australia. | Employed mothers ( | Paid parental leave | Mental well-being | Focus: SES inequalities |
| Huang J, Kim Y | Examine whether an economic intervention that encourages families to accumulate assets, reduces the social-emotional inequalities between children of unmarried mothers versus married mothers. | Mothers 18 years plus | Child Development Accounts (CDA) | Emotional development | Focus: SES (single mothers as a proxy for low SES) |
| Rathmann K, Pförtner T-K | Examine whether increased public spending relates to lower prevalence of mental health complaints and buffers against inequalities among adolescents. | Adolescents aged 11, 13 and 15-year-olds | Family benefits | Psychological health complaints | Focus: SES (Family Affluent Scale) |
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| Andersen I, Brønnum-Hansen H | Study the impact of ALMP and stricter eligibility criteria for income support among people with chronic illness, on their employment rate and receipt of non-health related benefits. | Residents aged 20–60 years | ALMPs and income support | Psychiatric diagnosis | Focus: Gender and SES inequalities |
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| Barr B, Kinderman P | Investigate whether mental health trends increased during a period of recession and welfare reform and whether inequalities existed in these trends. | 18–59 years ( | Disability, unemployment & housing benefits | Self-reported poor mental health | Focus: SES (unemployment and low education as a proxy for low SES) |
| Barr B, Taylor-Robinson D | Investigate whether the new UK disability assessment was associated with an increase in poor mental health and whether these changes differed between local authorities. | 18–64 years ( | Disability benefits reassessments | Suicide, anti-depressant prescriptions and self-rated mental health | Focus: SES inequalities (local area inequalities) |
| Blomqvist S, Burström B | Investigate whether health inequalities increased between employed and unemployed women between 2010 compared to 2006 after major Swedish social insurance reforms. | 18–64 years ( | Social insurance incl. Sickness + unemployment insurance | Mental distress | Focus: SES inequalities (employed vs. unemployed) |
| Van der Wel KA, Bambra C | Investigate whether the association between poor working conditions or a low level of education and poor mental health is less in countries providing higher levels of sickness benefit provisions. | 25–60 years (working individuals) | Sickness benefits and working conditions | Mental well-being | Focus: SES inequalities (low education, exposure to psychosocial strain and physically hazardous work) |
| Policy domain – Area-based initiatives | |||||
| Mohan G, Longo A | Assess the health impacts of a major urban regeneration policy. | Household members aged 16 years and older | Neighbourhood renewal | Mental distress | Focus: Gender and SES |
| Stafford M, Badland H | Determine whether the New Deal for Communities (NDC) intervention contributed towards reducing health inequalities and their social determinants | Men 25–65 yearsWomen 25–60 years | Area-based intervention - New Deal for Communities (NDC) | Mental health and mental distress | Focus: SES inequalities |
| Walthery P, Stafford M | Determine whether the NDC program had an overall effect on mental health over time and whether these changes differ between socio-economic groups. | 16 years and older | Area-based intervention - NDC | Mental health | Focus: SES inequalities |
+++ High quality study; ++ Medium quality study
ALMP Active Labour Market Policies
ASQ-SE Ages and Stages Questionnaire
CDA Child Development Accounts
CES-D8 Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale
GHQ-12 Global Health Questionnaire
HSBC Health Behavior in School Age Children
MCS Mental Health Component Score
MHI-5 Mental Health Inventory
NDC New Deal for Communities
NMSC Neo-Marxian Social Class
PPL Paid Parental Leave
S Suicide
SES Socio-Economic-Status
SF Short Form health survey
SF-36 Short Form health survey (36 items)
WHO-5 World Health Organization Well-Being Index
aStudy measured depression only in the third wave of the study, so the sample which included MH consisted of 23 countries and 6603 participants
bIncludes Sweden
clooks at austerity
Summary of changes in inequality by policy domain
| Policy domain | Summary of changes in inequalities |
|---|---|
| Welfare States | The evidence indicates that the Nordic model was associated with fewer mental health problems and fewer gender inequalities compared to other welfare regimes especially basic-security/market welfare states. |
| Family | The evidence indicates that welfare regimes with more inclusive family policies may reduce inequalities in mental health outcomes for women. |
| Employment | The evidence indicates increases in mental health problems for those in lower SES after welfare reforms (austerity measures). |
| Income Support | The evidence indicates that restrictions on income support may have negative effects (see employment). More generous welfare benefits are associated with fewer SES inequalities in mental health. |
| Education | Unclear knowledge about this policy domain. |
| Area-based initiatives | The evidence indicates that neighbourhood renewals in more disadvantaged areas provide some improvement to women’s mental well-being. |