Department of Health Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Chair Group Urban Economics, Department of Social Sciences, Wageningen University and Research, Hollandseweg 1, 6706KN Wageningen, the Netherlands.
Econ Hum Biol. 2019 Dec;35:162-184. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2019.06.004. Epub 2019 Jun 28.
Europe's Great Recession provides an opportunity to study the impact of increased financial insecurity on health. A number of studies explored the impact of the Recession on health, but they often reached different conclusions. To understand the root of this debate, we undertook a systematic literature review. Articles were analysed thematically based on: geography, data type, operationalisations of wealth and health, and study design. A critical appraisal was also undertaken. Forty-two studies, published from January 2010 to October 2018, were included in our review. Twenty-six of the forty-two studies found that the Great Recession worsened physical health indicators in the Eurozone. In terms of geography, a large concentration of studies focussed on Spain and Greece, indicating that there may be a gap in understanding the health consequences for EU countries with less severe experiences of the Recession. Regarding data type, nearly all studies used secondary datasets, possibly meaning that studies were constrained by the data available. In terms of operationalisations of wealth and health, a majority of studies used single/simple measures of both, so that these multi-faceted concepts were not fully reflected. Further, fewer than half included studies used panel data, with the remaining studies unable to undertake more causal analyses. The results of the critical appraisal showed that lower-quality studies tended to not find a negative impact of the Recession on health, whereas higher quality studies generally did. In future, we recommend conducting cross-country comparisons, using (inter)nationally-representative panel data conducted over a minimum of a ten-year time horizon, and employing multi-faceted operationalisations of wealth and health. This could provide more common ground across studies, and a clearer indication of whether the Recession impacted health.
欧洲大衰退为研究金融不安全感增加对健康的影响提供了机会。许多研究探讨了衰退对健康的影响,但它们往往得出了不同的结论。为了了解这场争论的根源,我们进行了系统的文献回顾。根据地理、数据类型、财富和健康的操作化以及研究设计,对文章进行了主题分析。我们还进行了批判性评估。我们的综述纳入了 42 篇发表于 2010 年 1 月至 2018 年 10 月的文章。其中 26 项研究发现,大衰退恶化了欧元区的身体健康指标。在地理方面,大量研究集中在西班牙和希腊,这表明对于衰退经历不太严重的欧盟国家,可能存在健康后果方面的理解差距。在数据类型方面,几乎所有研究都使用了二手数据集,这可能意味着研究受到了可用数据的限制。在财富和健康的操作化方面,大多数研究都使用了单一/简单的两者衡量标准,因此这些多方面的概念没有得到充分反映。此外,不到一半的研究使用面板数据,其余研究无法进行更因果分析。批判性评估的结果表明,质量较低的研究往往没有发现衰退对健康的负面影响,而质量较高的研究则普遍发现了这种影响。未来,我们建议进行跨国比较,使用(跨国)代表性面板数据,至少在十年的时间跨度内进行,并采用多方面的财富和健康操作化。这可以为研究提供更多共同点,并更清楚地表明衰退是否对健康产生了影响。