Maara John, Cirillo Cristina, Angeles Gustavo, Prencipe Leah, deMilliano Marlous, Lima Sarah M, Palermo Tia
Department of Economics, University of Nairobi, Kenya.
UNICEF Office of Research-Innocenti, Florence, Italy.
SSM Popul Health. 2023 Apr 14;22:101403. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2023.101403. eCollection 2023 Jun.
Poverty and poor mental health are closely linked. Cash transfers have significantly expanded globally. Given their objectives around poverty reduction and improving food security, a major chronic stressor in Africa, cash transfers may affect mental health outcomes. We examine impacts of three large-scale government cash transfer or cash plus programs in Ghana, Malawi, and Tanzania on self-perceived stress using an innovative, newly adapted measure for rural African settings. Linear regression models were used to estimate treatment impacts. We find that cash transfers reduced self-perceived stress in Malawi, but programs in Ghana and Tanzania had no impacts on self-perceived stress. These mixed findings, combined with recent reviews on cash transfers and mental health, suggest that cash transfers may play a role in improving mental health. However, cash alone may not be sufficient to overcome many challenges related to poverty, and complementary programming may also be needed to improve mental health.
贫困与不良心理健康状况紧密相连。现金转移支付在全球范围内显著增加。鉴于其围绕减贫和改善粮食安全的目标,而粮食安全是非洲的一个主要慢性压力源,现金转移支付可能会影响心理健康结果。我们使用一种针对非洲农村地区创新的、新调整的测量方法,研究了加纳、马拉维和坦桑尼亚的三项大规模政府现金转移支付或现金加项目对自我感知压力的影响。使用线性回归模型来估计治疗效果。我们发现,现金转移支付降低了马拉维的自我感知压力,但加纳和坦桑尼亚的项目对自我感知压力没有影响。这些混合的研究结果,加上近期对现金转移支付和心理健康的综述,表明现金转移支付可能在改善心理健康方面发挥作用。然而,仅靠现金可能不足以克服与贫困相关的许多挑战,还可能需要补充性项目来改善心理健康。