Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment

Abstract Background Earlier research shows that there is an association between unemployment and poor mental health, and that recovery from the damages to mental health obtained during unemployment remains incomplete over a long period of time. The present study relates this ‘mental health scarring’...

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Main Authors: Virtanen, Pekka, Hammarström, Anne, Janlert, Urban
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/15/1/14
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spelling ftbiomed:oai:biomedcentral.com:s12939-016-0305-0 2023-05-15T17:45:08+02:00 Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment Virtanen, Pekka Hammarström, Anne Janlert, Urban 2016-01-20 http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/15/1/14 en eng BioMed Central Ltd. http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/15/1/14 Copyright 2016 Virtanen et al. Research 2016 ftbiomed 2016-01-24T01:08:24Z Abstract Background Earlier research shows that there is an association between unemployment and poor mental health, and that recovery from the damages to mental health obtained during unemployment remains incomplete over a long period of time. The present study relates this ‘mental health scarring’ to the trade cycle, exploring if those exposed to youth unemployment during boom differ from those exposed during recession with respect to mental health in the middle age. Methods The sample consists of two cohorts from the same industrial town in Northern Sweden: the cohort born in 1965 and the cohort born in 1973 included all pupils attending the last grade of compulsory school, respectively, in 1981 and in 1989. Their depressiveness and anxiousness were assessed by questionnaires at age 21 and again at age 43/39. Mental health at follow-up was related to exposure to unemployment during age years 21-25. Statistical significance of the cohort*exposure interactions from binary logistic regression analyses were used to assess the cohort differences in the mental health between Cohort65 and Cohort73, entering the labour market, respectively, during a boom and a recession. Results Compared to the unexposed, high exposure to unemployment at the age from 21 to 25 was associated to increased probability of poor mental health in the middle age in both in Cohort65 (odds ratio 2.19 [1.46-3.30] for anxiousness and 1.85 [1.25-2.74]for depressiveness) and in Cohort73 (odds ratio 2.13 [1.33-3.39] for anxiousness and 1.38 [0.89-2.14] for depressiveness). The differences between the cohorts also turned out as statistically non-significant. Conclusions The scars of unemployment exposure onto future health seem to be rather insensitive to economic trades. Thus, at the population level this would mean that the long-term health costs that can be attributed to youth unemployment are more widespread in the generation that suffers of recession around the entry to the work life. Other/Unknown Material Northern Sweden BioMed Central
institution Open Polar
collection BioMed Central
op_collection_id ftbiomed
language English
description Abstract Background Earlier research shows that there is an association between unemployment and poor mental health, and that recovery from the damages to mental health obtained during unemployment remains incomplete over a long period of time. The present study relates this ‘mental health scarring’ to the trade cycle, exploring if those exposed to youth unemployment during boom differ from those exposed during recession with respect to mental health in the middle age. Methods The sample consists of two cohorts from the same industrial town in Northern Sweden: the cohort born in 1965 and the cohort born in 1973 included all pupils attending the last grade of compulsory school, respectively, in 1981 and in 1989. Their depressiveness and anxiousness were assessed by questionnaires at age 21 and again at age 43/39. Mental health at follow-up was related to exposure to unemployment during age years 21-25. Statistical significance of the cohort*exposure interactions from binary logistic regression analyses were used to assess the cohort differences in the mental health between Cohort65 and Cohort73, entering the labour market, respectively, during a boom and a recession. Results Compared to the unexposed, high exposure to unemployment at the age from 21 to 25 was associated to increased probability of poor mental health in the middle age in both in Cohort65 (odds ratio 2.19 [1.46-3.30] for anxiousness and 1.85 [1.25-2.74]for depressiveness) and in Cohort73 (odds ratio 2.13 [1.33-3.39] for anxiousness and 1.38 [0.89-2.14] for depressiveness). The differences between the cohorts also turned out as statistically non-significant. Conclusions The scars of unemployment exposure onto future health seem to be rather insensitive to economic trades. Thus, at the population level this would mean that the long-term health costs that can be attributed to youth unemployment are more widespread in the generation that suffers of recession around the entry to the work life.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Virtanen, Pekka
Hammarström, Anne
Janlert, Urban
spellingShingle Virtanen, Pekka
Hammarström, Anne
Janlert, Urban
Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment
author_facet Virtanen, Pekka
Hammarström, Anne
Janlert, Urban
author_sort Virtanen, Pekka
title Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment
title_short Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment
title_full Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment
title_fullStr Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment
title_full_unstemmed Children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment
title_sort children of boom and recession and the scars to the mental health – a comparative study on the long term effects of youth unemployment
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
publishDate 2016
url http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/15/1/14
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_relation http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/15/1/14
op_rights Copyright 2016 Virtanen et al.
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