Financial hardship, mastery and social support: Explaining poor mental health amongst the inadequately employed using data from the HILDA survey
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Crowe, Laura
Butterworth, Peter
Leach, Liana
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Elsevier
Abstract
Objective: This study analysed data from the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia
(HILDA) Survey to examine the relationship between employment status and mental health, and the
mediating effects of financial hardship, mastery and social support. In addition, the study sought to
explore the effects of duration of unemployment on mental health.
Methods: The primary analysis used three waves of data from the HILDA Survey with 4965 young adult
respondents. Longitudinal population-averaged logistic regression models assessed the association of
employment status and mental health, including the contribution of mastery, financial hardship and
social support in explaining this association between employment groups (unemployed vs. employed;
under employed vs. employed). Sensitivity analyses utilised a fixed-effects approach and also considered
the full-range of working-age respondents. Regression analysis was used to explore the effect of duration
of unemployment on mental health.
Results: Respondents’ who identified as unemployed or underemployed were at higher risk of poor
mental health outcomes when compared to their employed counterparts. This association was ameliorated
when accounting for mastery, financial hardship and social support for the unemployed, and was
fully mediated for the underemployed. The fixed-effects models showed the transition to unemployment
was associated with a decline in mental health and that mastery in particular contributed to that change.
The same results were found with a broader age range of respondents. Finally, the relationship between
duration of unemployment and mental health was not linear, with mental health showing marked decline
across the first 9 weeks of unemployment.
Conclusions and implications: Mastery, social support and financial hardship are important factors in
understanding the association of poor mental health with both unemployment and underemployment.
Furthermore, the results suggest that the most deleterious effects on mental health may occur in the first
two months of unemployment before plateauing. In order to prevent deterioration in mental health,
these findings suggest intervention should commence immediately following job loss.
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SSM - Population Health
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