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Ulf Gerdtham. Photo.

Ulf Gerdtham

Professor

Ulf Gerdtham. Photo.

Social assistance and mental health: evidence from longitudinal administrative data on pharmaceutical consumption

Author

  • Margareta Dackehag
  • Lina Maria Ellegård
  • Ulf-Göran Gerdtham
  • Therese Nilsson

Summary, in English

This paper adds to the small literature on the role of welfare benefits and mental health by studying the relationship between uptake of Social Assistance Benefit (SAB) and objective mental health measures. We use rich longitudinal administrative data on income, unemployment benefits and psychopharmaceutic prescriptions (antidepressants, anxiolytics, and hypnotics) for more than 140,000 Swedes in 2006–2012. Relative to earlier studies focusing on subjective mental health, an advantage of our approach is that we use longitudinal administrative data that do not suffer from non-response, under-reporting and self-justification biases. While we document a strong positive association between SAB and psychopharmaca consumption in ordinary least squares models, fixed effects estimates indicate that most of the association is due to unobserved individual-specific predisposition. Insofar as a relationship remains in the fixed effect models, it is driven by highly educated men. This result is consistent with earlier quantitative studies using survey data and with qualitative research suggesting that SAB uptake may be particularly stigmatizing for individuals with a higher initial socioeconomic position.

Department/s

  • Department of Economics
  • Centre for Economic Demography
  • Health Economics
  • EpiHealth: Epidemiology for Health

Publishing year

2020

Language

English

Pages

2165-2177

Publication/Series

Applied Economics

Volume

52

Issue

20

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Routledge

Topic

  • Health Care Service and Management, Health Policy and Services and Health Economy

Status

Published

Project

  • Public Management Research

Research group

  • Health Economics

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1466-4283