Title of article :
Poor mental health influences risk and duration of unemployment:
a prospective study
Author/Authors :
Peter Butterworth، نويسنده , , Liana S. Leach، نويسنده , , Jane Pirkis، نويسنده , , Margaret Kelaher، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
Purpose The current paper aims to investigate the role of
mental health in determining future employment status.
Much of the previous longitudinal and prospective research
has focused on how unemployment adversely influences
mental health, while the reverse causal direction has
received much less attention.
Methods This study uses five waves of data from 5,846
respondents in the HILDA survey, a nationally representative
household panel survey conducted annually since
2001. Prospective analyses followed a group of respondents
who were not unemployed at baseline across four
subsequent years and investigated whether baseline mental
health was associated with subsequent unemployment.
Results Baseline mental health status was a significant
predictor of overall time spent unemployed for both men
and women. Decomposing this overall effect identified sex
differences. For women but not men, baseline mental
health was associated with risk of experiencing any subsequent
unemployment whereas for men but not women
mental health was associated with the duration of unemployment
amongst those who experienced unemployment.
Conclusions By following a group of respondents who
were not unemployed over time, we showed that poor
mental health predicted subsequent unemployment. On
average, men and women who experienced symptoms of
common mental disorders spent greater time over the next
4 years unemployed than those with better mental health
but there were sex differences in the nature of this effect.
These findings highlight the importance of mental health in
the design and delivery of employment and welfare policy.
Keywords :
Employment Mental health Health selection
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)