Das Jishnu, Do Quy-Toan, Friedman Jed, McKenzie David, Scott Kinnon
World Bank, Development Economics Research Group, MSN MC 3-311, 1818 H Street, Washington, DC, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2007 Aug;65(3):467-80. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.02.037. Epub 2007 Apr 25.
The relationship between poverty and mental health has received considerable attention in the recent literature. However, the associations presented in existing studies typically rely on limited samples of individuals and on proxy indicators for poverty such as education, the lack of tap water, or being unemployed. We revisit the relationship between poverty and mental health using data from nationally representative household surveys in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Indonesia and Mexico, along with special surveys from India and Tonga. As in previous studies, we find that individuals who are older, female, widowed, and in poor health are more likely to report worse mental health outcomes. Individuals living with others with poor mental health are significantly more likely to report worse mental health themselves. The size of the coefficients and their significance are comparable across the five countries. In contrast to previous studies, the relationship between higher education and better mental health is weak or non-existent. Furthermore, there is no consistent association between consumption poverty and mental health - in two countries mental health measures are marginally worse for the poor; in two countries there is no association; and in one country mental health measures are better for the poor compared to the non-poor. Moreover, the sizes of the coefficients for both education and consumption poverty are small compared to other factors considered here. While the lack of an association between consumption poverty and mental health implies that poor mental health is not a "disease of affluence", neither is it a disease of poverty. Changes in life circumstances brought on, for instance, by illness may have a greater impact on mental health than levels of poverty. Effective public health policy for mental health should focus on protecting individuals and households from adverse events and on targeted interventions following such adverse changes.
贫困与心理健康之间的关系在最近的文献中受到了相当多的关注。然而,现有研究中呈现的关联通常依赖于有限的个体样本以及贫困的替代指标,如教育程度、缺乏自来水或失业情况。我们利用波斯尼亚和黑塞哥维那、印度尼西亚和墨西哥具有全国代表性的家庭调查数据,以及印度和汤加的专项调查,重新审视贫困与心理健康之间的关系。与以往研究一样,我们发现年龄较大、女性、丧偶且健康状况不佳的个体更有可能报告较差的心理健康结果。与心理健康状况不佳的人生活在一起的个体,自己报告心理健康较差的可能性显著更高。这五个国家的系数大小及其显著性相当。与以往研究不同的是,高等教育与更好的心理健康之间的关系微弱或不存在。此外,消费贫困与心理健康之间没有一致的关联——在两个国家,穷人的心理健康指标略差;在两个国家没有关联;在一个国家,穷人的心理健康指标比非穷人更好。此外,与这里考虑的其他因素相比,教育和消费贫困的系数都很小。虽然消费贫困与心理健康之间缺乏关联意味着心理健康不佳不是“富裕病”,但它也不是贫困病。例如,疾病带来的生活状况变化可能比贫困程度对心理健康的影响更大。有效的心理健康公共卫生政策应侧重于保护个人和家庭免受不良事件的影响,并在发生此类不良变化后进行有针对性的干预。