Behavioural Science Centre, Stirling Management School, Stirling University, FK94LA, United Kingdom.
Behavioural Science Centre, Stirling Management School, Stirling University, FK94LA, United Kingdom; UCD Geary Institute, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland; Department of Psychology, Maynooth University, Maynooth, Co. Kildare, Ireland.
Soc Sci Med. 2019 Feb;222:305-314. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.12.030. Epub 2019 Jan 8.
Symptoms of mental health problems have been shown to predict adverse labour market outcomes including unemployment, but no studies have used sibling models to examine the relationship between clinically diagnosed psychiatric conditions in adolescence and subsequent unemployment.
This study used extensive Swedish registry data to investigate the link between psychiatric conditions diagnosed during military conscription and unemployment over two decades. Further, we identified whether this relation was amplified during an economic downturn and tested whether it was affected by adjustment for unobserved family characteristics using sibling fixed-effects models.
Psychiatric conditions were diagnosed by psychologists and psychiatrists at military conscription in sample of 929,191 Swedish men (mean age = 18.4 years) between 1969 and 1989. The average number of days unemployed per year was observed from 1992 to 2012, using the records of the Swedish Public Employment Services.
After adjustment for physical health and childhood socioeconomic status those diagnosed with any psychiatric condition experienced approximately an additional 10 days per year unemployment compared to others. Alcohol (16 days unemployment) and other substance use disorders (17 days) were the strongest predictors of exposure to future unemployment, followed by personality disorders (10 days), neurotic and adjustment conditions (nine days), and depressive disorders (six days). Family background factors accounted for approximately half of the observed relationship between mental health conditions and unemployment. Psychiatric conditions interacted with macroeconomic conditions such that those with pre-existing alcohol-related, and neurotic and adjustment disorders were disproportionately more likely to become unemployed following the 1990s crisis in Sweden.
Adolescent mental health conditions forecast an elevated risk of unemployment, which endures over the life course and is amplified in times of economic uncertainty. Investment in youth mental health services and alcohol and substance use prevention programs may yield economic benefits by reducing unemployment.
心理健康问题的症状已被证明与不利的劳动力市场结果相关,包括失业,但尚无研究使用兄弟姐妹模型来检验青春期临床诊断的精神疾病与随后失业之间的关系。
本研究使用广泛的瑞典登记数据,调查了兵役期间诊断出的精神疾病与二十多年后失业之间的关系。此外,我们确定了这种关系在经济衰退期间是否会加剧,并通过兄弟姐妹固定效应模型来检验其是否受未观察到的家庭特征调整的影响。
在 1969 年至 1989 年间,有 929191 名瑞典男性(平均年龄为 18.4 岁)在兵役期间接受了心理学家和精神科医生的精神疾病诊断。使用瑞典公共就业服务机构的记录,从 1992 年到 2012 年观察每年失业的平均天数。
在调整了身体健康和童年社会经济地位后,与其他人相比,那些被诊断患有任何精神疾病的人每年大约会增加 10 天的失业时间。酒精(16 天失业)和其他物质使用障碍(17 天)是未来失业的最强预测因素,其次是人格障碍(10 天)、神经症和适应障碍(9 天)以及抑郁障碍(6 天)。家庭背景因素大约占精神健康状况与失业之间观察到的关系的一半。精神疾病与宏观经济条件相互作用,以至于那些患有先前存在的与酒精相关的神经症和适应障碍的人在瑞典 20 世纪 90 年代的危机之后更有可能失业。
青少年精神健康状况预示着失业风险升高,这种风险会持续一生,并在经济不确定时期加剧。对青年心理健康服务和酒精及物质使用预防计划的投资可能会通过减少失业来带来经济效益。