International Journal of Public Health (Nov 2022)

Socioeconomic Status, the Countries’ Socioeconomic Development and Mental Health: Observational Evidence for Persons with Spinal Cord Injury from 22 Countries

  • Christine Fekete,
  • Christine Fekete,
  • Hannah Tough,
  • Hannah Tough,
  • Annelie Schedin Leiulfsrud,
  • Annelie Schedin Leiulfsrud,
  • Karin Postma,
  • Karin Postma,
  • Andrea Bökel,
  • Piotr Tederko,
  • Jan D. Reinhardt,
  • Jan D. Reinhardt,
  • Jan D. Reinhardt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/ijph.2022.1604673
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67

Abstract

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Objectives: Evidence on social inequalities in mental health of persons with physical impairments is limited. We therefore investigate associations of individual-level socioeconomic status (SES) and the country-level socioeconomic development (SED) with mental health in persons with spinal cord injury (SCI).Methods: We analyzed data from 12,588 participants of the International SCI Community Survey from 22 countries. To investigate individual-level inequalities, SES indicators (education, income, financial hardship, subjective status) were regressed on the SF-36 mental health index (MHI-5), stratified by countries. Country-level inequalities were analyzed with empirical Bayes estimates of random intercepts derived from linear mixed-models adjusting for individual-level SES.Results: Financial hardship and subjective status consistently predicted individual-level mental health inequalities. Country-level SED was inconsistently related to mental health when adjusting for individual-level SES. It however appeared that higher SED was associated with better mental health within higher-resourced countries.Conclusion: Reducing impoverishment and marginalization may present valuable strategies to reduce mental health inequalities in SCI populations. Investigations of country-level determinants of mental health in persons with SCI should consider influences beyond country-level SED, such as cultural factors.

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