International Journal of Public Health (Aug 2024)

Determinants of Mental Health Inequalities Among People With Selected Citizenships in Germany

  • Miriam Blume,
  • Miriam Blume,
  • Susanne Bartig,
  • Susanne Bartig,
  • Lina Wollgast,
  • Carmen Koschollek,
  • Katja Kajikhina,
  • Katja Kajikhina,
  • Marleen Bug,
  • Ulfert Hapke,
  • Claudia Hövener

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/ijph.2024.1607267
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 69

Abstract

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ObjectivesMental health is essential for overall health and is influenced by different social determinants. The aim of this paper was to examine which determinants are associated with mental health inequalities among people with selected citizenships in Germany.MethodsData were derived from the multilingual interview survey “German Health Update: Fokus (GEDA Fokus)” among adults with Croatian, Italian, Polish, Syrian, or Turkish citizenship (11/2021–05/2022). Poisson regressions were used to calculate prevalence ratios for symptoms of depression (PHQ-9) and anxiety disorder (GAD-7).ResultsSociodemographic (sex, income, age, household size) and psychosocial (social support and self-reported discrimination) determinants were associated with symptoms of depression and/or anxiety disorder. The prevalence of mental disorders varied most by self-reported discrimination.ConclusionOur findings suggest mental health inequalities among people with selected citizenships living in Germany. To reduce these, social inequities and everyday discrimination need to be addressed in structural prevention measures as well as in interventions on the communal level. Protective factors (e.g., social support) are also important to reduce mental health inequalities on the individual and community level.

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