Administrative Data Research Centre - Northern Ireland (ADRC-NI), Centre for Public Health, Queen's University Belfast, Royal Victoria Hospital, Grosvenor Road, Belfast BT 12 6BA, UK.
UKCRC Centre of Excellence for Public Health (Northern Ireland), Centre for Public Health, Queen's University Belfast, Royal Victoria Hospital, Grosvenor Road, Belfast BT 12 6BA, UK.
Health Place. 2017 Sep;47:29-35. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2017.06.010. Epub 2017 Jul 8.
An ethnic group that lives in a neighbourhood in which it is in the minority, termed 'lower ethnic density,' tends to report a higher incidence of mental ill-health. This population-based study investigated for the first time the existence of an own-group density effect among Catholic and Protestant communities in Northern Ireland. The entire Northern Ireland born Catholic and Protestant working age (n = 1, 004,060) enumerated population in the 2011 Census of Northern Ireland were included in the study via administrative data-linkage methodology. Catholics had a greater likelihood of reporting mental ill health in neighbourhoods with the largest proportion of Catholics (OR = 1.25, 95%CI 1.07-1.47), whereas mental health among Protestants was not associated with neighbourhood proportion of Protestants, after adjusting for socio-economic status and neighbourhood deprivation. The results indicate that a complex relationship exists between group identity, population composition of ethnic and religious groups and prevalence of community mental health.
居住在少数民族聚居地区(称为“少数民族密度较低”)的族群,往往报告心理健康不良的发病率较高。这项基于人群的研究首次调查了北爱尔兰的天主教和新教社区中是否存在同族密度效应。通过行政数据链接方法,将北爱尔兰出生的所有天主教徒和新教徒工作年龄(n=1,004,060)人口普查人口都纳入了这项研究。在调整了社会经济地位和社区贫困状况后,在天主教徒比例最大的社区中,天主教徒报告心理健康不良的可能性更大(OR=1.25,95%CI 1.07-1.47),而新教徒的心理健康状况与新教徒在社区中的比例无关。结果表明,群体认同、族裔和宗教群体的人口构成以及社区心理健康的流行程度之间存在着复杂的关系。