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Education, immigration and rising mental health inequality in Sweden

Linder, Anna LU ; Spika, Devon LU ; Gerdtham, Ulf G. LU orcid ; Fritzell, Sara LU and Heckley, Gawain LU orcid (2020) In Social Science and Medicine 264.
Abstract

Educational and income gradients in health are well established in the literature but there is need for a better understanding of how mental health inequalities change over time, and what drives the development. We aim to study how psychiatric diagnosis and its income-related inequality have changed over time in Sweden and to make a first attempt at disentangling the development by decomposing any changes in terms of changes in two important demographic characteristics: education and migration background. We use administrative patient data to study psychiatric inpatient diagnosis in the years 1994 and 2011. The study population comprises all individuals aged 31–64 years living in Sweden. Income-related inequalities are measured by the... (More)

Educational and income gradients in health are well established in the literature but there is need for a better understanding of how mental health inequalities change over time, and what drives the development. We aim to study how psychiatric diagnosis and its income-related inequality have changed over time in Sweden and to make a first attempt at disentangling the development by decomposing any changes in terms of changes in two important demographic characteristics: education and migration background. We use administrative patient data to study psychiatric inpatient diagnosis in the years 1994 and 2011. The study population comprises all individuals aged 31–64 years living in Sweden. Income-related inequalities are measured by the Concentration Index (CI). We decompose changes in the probability of receiving a diagnosis and changes in income-related inequality over time to understand the role of changing demographics. Our results show that over the study period the probability of receiving a psychiatric inpatient diagnosis increased by 12.6%, while the relative and absolute income-related inequalities in diagnosis increased by 48.2% and 66.7% respectively. In 2011, more than half of psychiatric inpatients were found among the poorest fifth of the population. The decomposition results suggest that changes in education and migration background have not played a substantial role in determining these increases. Education levels increased substantially over the study period which would be expected to protect against mental ill-health. Instead, we find that diagnoses have become more concentrated amongst the lowest educated individuals and the lowest income families, groups who appear to be increasingly disadvantaged. The growing proportion of individuals with foreign background in Sweden does, in fact, predict small increases in the probability of diagnosis, while the impact on diagnosis inequality varies depending on the definition of foreign background.

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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Concentration index, Inequality in health, Mental health, Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition, RIF-Regression, Sweden
in
Social Science and Medicine
volume
264
article number
113265
pages
8 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85090143618
  • pmid:32892082
ISSN
0277-9536
DOI
10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113265
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
88be8e0e-f9b7-486b-8c23-bbd3abc2124e
date added to LUP
2020-09-11 12:26:50
date last changed
2024-05-29 19:26:48
@article{88be8e0e-f9b7-486b-8c23-bbd3abc2124e,
  abstract     = {{<p>Educational and income gradients in health are well established in the literature but there is need for a better understanding of how mental health inequalities change over time, and what drives the development. We aim to study how psychiatric diagnosis and its income-related inequality have changed over time in Sweden and to make a first attempt at disentangling the development by decomposing any changes in terms of changes in two important demographic characteristics: education and migration background. We use administrative patient data to study psychiatric inpatient diagnosis in the years 1994 and 2011. The study population comprises all individuals aged 31–64 years living in Sweden. Income-related inequalities are measured by the Concentration Index (CI). We decompose changes in the probability of receiving a diagnosis and changes in income-related inequality over time to understand the role of changing demographics. Our results show that over the study period the probability of receiving a psychiatric inpatient diagnosis increased by 12.6%, while the relative and absolute income-related inequalities in diagnosis increased by 48.2% and 66.7% respectively. In 2011, more than half of psychiatric inpatients were found among the poorest fifth of the population. The decomposition results suggest that changes in education and migration background have not played a substantial role in determining these increases. Education levels increased substantially over the study period which would be expected to protect against mental ill-health. Instead, we find that diagnoses have become more concentrated amongst the lowest educated individuals and the lowest income families, groups who appear to be increasingly disadvantaged. The growing proportion of individuals with foreign background in Sweden does, in fact, predict small increases in the probability of diagnosis, while the impact on diagnosis inequality varies depending on the definition of foreign background.</p>}},
  author       = {{Linder, Anna and Spika, Devon and Gerdtham, Ulf G. and Fritzell, Sara and Heckley, Gawain}},
  issn         = {{0277-9536}},
  keywords     = {{Concentration index; Inequality in health; Mental health; Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition; RIF-Regression; Sweden}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Social Science and Medicine}},
  title        = {{Education, immigration and rising mental health inequality in Sweden}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113265}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113265}},
  volume       = {{264}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}