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儿童税收抵免、消费模式与心理健康:对新冠疫情期间美国人口普查局家庭脉搏调查数据的中介分析。

Child Tax Credit, Spending Patterns, and Mental Health: Mediation Analyses of Data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey during COVID-19.

机构信息

Department of Housing & Interior Design (AgeTech-Service Convergence Major), College of Human Ecology, Kyung Hee University, Seoul 02447, Republic of Korea.

Department of Environmental Planning, Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Republic of Korea.

出版信息

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 Mar 1;20(5):4425. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20054425.

Abstract

This study examined the relationship between the receipt of COVID-19 child tax credit and adult mental health problems in the United States, and we explored whether and the extent to which a wide range of spending patterns of the credit-15 patterns regarding basic necessities, child education, and household expenditure-mediated the relationship. We used COVID-19-specialized data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey, a representative population sample (N = 98,026) of adult respondents (18 and older) who participated between 21 July 2021 and 11 July 2022. By conducting mediation analyses with logistic regression, we found relationships between the credit and lower levels of anxiety (odds ratio [OR] = 0.914; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.879, 0.952). The OR was substantially mediated by spending on basic necessities such as food and housing costs (proportion mediated = 46% and 44%, respectively). The mediating role was relatively moderate in the case of spending on child education and household expenditure. We also found that spending the credit on savings or investments reduces the effect of the child tax credit on anxiety (-40%) while donations or giving to family were not a significant mediator. Findings on depression were consistent with anxiety. The child tax credit-depression relationships were substantially mediated by spending on food and housing (proportion mediated = 53% and 70%). These mediation analyses suggested that different patterns of credit spending are important mediators of the relationship between the receipt of the child tax credit and mental illnesses. Public health approaches to improve adult mental health during and after the COVID-19 pandemic need to consider the notable mediating role of spending patterns.

摘要

本研究考察了美国 COVID-19 儿童税收抵免的领取与成年人心理健康问题之间的关系,并探讨了广泛的信贷支出模式——15 种关于基本必需品、儿童教育和家庭支出的模式——是否以及在何种程度上调节了这种关系。我们使用了美国人口普查局家庭脉搏调查的 COVID-19 专项数据,这是一个具有代表性的成年受访者(18 岁及以上)人群样本(N=98026),他们在 2021 年 7 月 21 日至 2022 年 7 月 11 日之间参与了调查。通过使用逻辑回归进行中介分析,我们发现信贷与较低水平的焦虑之间存在关系(优势比[OR]=0.914;95%置信区间[CI]=0.879,0.952)。这种关系在很大程度上被食品和住房等基本必需品的支出所中介(分别占中介比例的 46%和 44%)。在儿童教育和家庭支出方面,中介作用相对适中。我们还发现,将信贷用于储蓄或投资会降低儿童税收抵免对焦虑的影响(-40%),而捐款或给予家庭则不是一个重要的中介。关于抑郁的发现与焦虑一致。信贷支出模式在儿童税收抵免与抑郁之间的关系中起着重要的中介作用,主要通过食品和住房支出(分别占中介比例的 53%和 70%)。这些中介分析表明,信贷支出模式的不同模式是儿童税收抵免领取与心理健康问题之间关系的重要中介。在 COVID-19 大流行期间和之后,改善成年人心理健康的公共卫生方法需要考虑支出模式的显著中介作用。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/437c/10002275/38019e4e11bc/ijerph-20-04425-g001.jpg

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