Kersjes Christina, Demirer Ibrahim, Pförtner Timo-Kolja, Beese Florian, Hoebel Jens, Schnitzer Susanne, Mauz Elvira
Department of Epidemiology and Health Monitoring, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
"Institute of Medical Sociology and Rehabilitation Science, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Front Public Health. 2025 May 1;13:1535354. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1535354. eCollection 2025.
A large body of evidence shows poorer mental health among lower socioeconomic groups, with chronic stress being an important pathway in this relationship. It was expected that the mental health of people with low socioeconomic status may have been particularly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. While it has been established that stress also impacted mental health during the pandemic, the aim of this study was to analyze if pandemic-induced psychosocial stress (PIPS) mediated educational differences in mental health-related quality of life (MHRQOL) and which life domains were particularly affected.
The data came from the population-based representative study "Corona Monitoring Nationwide - Wave 2 (RKI-SOEP-2)," from November 2021-February 2022, restricted to the working age population (18-67 years, = 7,425). The mediating role of PIPS in educational differences (fractional rank variable from 0 [lowest] to 1 [highest education]) in MHRQOL was assessed for the life domains family, partnership, financial situation, work/school, social life, and leisure time. We used causal mediation analysis to estimate the total, indirect, and direct effects.
MHRQOL increased with higher education. Higher education was associated with more PIPS in the domain's family, social life, and leisure time, while lower education was associated with more financial PIPS. PIPS in the life domains family, financial situation, leisure time, and social life significantly mediated educational differences in MHRQOL. No significant mediation effect was found for partnership and work/school PIPS.
PIPS contributed to educational differences in MHRQOL, with different educational levels showing more stress in different life domains. Group-targeted and life domain-specific approaches for prevention and intervention should be considered.
大量证据表明,社会经济地位较低群体的心理健康状况较差,慢性压力是这种关系中的一条重要途径。预计社会经济地位较低人群的心理健康可能尤其受到新冠疫情的影响。虽然已经确定压力在疫情期间也影响了心理健康,但本研究的目的是分析疫情引发的心理社会压力(PIPS)是否介导了心理健康相关生活质量(MHRQOL)方面的教育差异,以及哪些生活领域受到了特别影响。
数据来自2021年11月至2022年2月基于人群的代表性研究“全国新冠监测——第二轮(RKI - SOEP - 2)”,仅限于工作年龄人群(18 - 67岁,n = 7425)。针对家庭、伴侣关系、财务状况、工作/学习、社交生活和休闲时间等生活领域,评估了PIPS在MHRQOL教育差异(从0[最低]到1[最高教育程度]的分数等级变量)中的中介作用。我们使用因果中介分析来估计总效应、间接效应和直接效应。
MHRQOL随着教育程度的提高而增加。高等教育与家庭、社交生活和休闲时间领域更多的PIPS相关,而低等教育与更多的财务PIPS相关。家庭、财务状况、休闲时间和社交生活等生活领域的PIPS显著介导了MHRQOL方面的教育差异。未发现伴侣关系和工作/学习方面的PIPS有显著中介效应。
PIPS导致了MHRQOL方面的教育差异,不同教育水平在不同生活领域表现出更多压力。应考虑针对群体和特定生活领域的预防和干预方法。