Angela Jackson’s research while affiliated with Monash University (Australia) and other places

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Publications (2)


Estimated rates of poor mental health by age and gender. Proportion with poor mental health and 95% confidence intervals by age and gender. Poor mental health is defined as the lowest 10% of the gender‐specific distribution of mental health
Estimated effects of unemployment on poor mental health by age and gender. Coefficient estimates and 95% confidence intervals, rescaled to be in percentage point units, are presented in the graphs. All regressions include local area fixed‐effects, year fixed‐effects, and age and month‐of‐year fixed‐effects. The sample sizes for the five male regressions, in ascending age‐group order, equal 18,776, 18,517, 19,891, 17,804, and 13,392. Equivalent sample sizes for the female regressions equal 21,302, 21,374, 22,512, 19,858, and 14,927
Whose mental health declines during economic downturns?
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

October 2021

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99 Reads

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10 Citations

Health Economics

Nicole Black

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Angela Jackson

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David W. Johnston

Prior research shows that economic downturns are associated with increases in mental illness. However, we know little about whose mental health is most negatively affected. Is it the young or old, men or women, employed or non‐employed, rich or poor? Using an 18‐year panel dataset of Australians, we contribute to this understanding by estimating the impact of changes in unemployment on mental health, separately by population subgroups. Our mental health measure captures psychological distress and emotional difficulties, which are often missed by infrequent event indicators such as suicides. We find that young women suffer most during economic downturns. Men and women of older ages are not significantly affected. The effects for young women are driven by those in insecure employment, and those from low socioeconomic backgrounds. Our results suggest that public health programs should emphasize the mental health of young women during economic downturns.

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Whose mental health declines during economic downturns?

June 2021

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34 Reads

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1 Citation

Prior research shows that economic downturns are associated with increases in mental illness. However, we know little about whose mental health is most negatively affected. Is it the young or old, men or women, employed or non-employed, rich or poor? Using an 18-year panel dataset of Australians, we contribute to this understanding by estimating the impact of changes in unemployment on mental health, separately by population subgroups. Our mental health measure captures psychological distress and emotional difficulties, which are often missed by infrequent event indicators such as suicides. We find that young women suffer most during economic downturns. Men and women of older ages are not significantly affected. The effects for young women are driven by those in insecure employment, and those from low socioeconomic backgrounds. Our results suggest that public health programs should emphasize the mental health of young women during economic downturns.

Citations (2)


... So gehören Menschen mit insbesondere schweren psychischen Störungen zu den Hauptgefährdeten. Es gibt weiterhin Hinweise, dass unter anderem junge Frauen besonders von den psychischen Folgen von wirtschaftlichen Rezessionen betroffen sind, insbesondere diejenigen in unsicheren Arbeitsverhältnissen oder mit einem niedrigen sozioökonomischen Status (Black et al., 2022). Andere Untersuchungen sehen insbesondere Männer im arbeitsfähigen Alter gefährdet (Martin-Carrasco et al., 2016). ...

Reference:

Biodiversitätsverlust
Whose mental health declines during economic downturns?

Health Economics

... For instance, women are more likely to be a primary caregiver (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2020), have insecure employment (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2021), be victims of assault at work, home, or while commuting (Gender Equity Victoria, 2021), and be more negatively impacted during times of economic stress and uncertainty such as a global pandemic (Andersen, Toubøl, Kirkegaard, & Bang Carlsen, 2021;Black, Jackson, & Johnston, 2021;Preston, 2021). A smartphone can play a fundamentally different role for women and may facilitate otherwise unattainable benefits specific to their social needs and well-being (Bloom, Gielen, & Glass, 2016;Crowe & Middleton, 2012;Starks, Dillahunt, & Haimson, 2019). ...

Whose mental health declines during economic downturns?
  • Citing Preprint
  • June 2021