Poverty and mental health: social causation or social drift Flashcards

1
Q

What is the recognition of the links between poverty and mental health in LMICs?

A

It is gaining international recognition, especially since 2010

  • United Nations Assembly ‘Commission on Social Determinants of Health’ (2010)
  • WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health and WHO ‘Mental health and development’ (2010)
  • WHO ‘Social determinants of mental health’ (2010, 2014)
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2
Q

What is the association between poverty and common mental disorders in LMICs (Lund et al., 2010)?

A

Systematic review: 115 studies, 36 countries:
- association between diverse measures of poverty and increased prevalence of common mental disorders

  • association between poverty and increased severity, longer course and worse outcomes for common mental disorders
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3
Q

What is the problem with most studies investigating the association between poverty and common mental disorders in LMICs (Lund et al., 2010)?

A

It was not possible to establish causality

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4
Q

What characterises the relationship between poverty and mental illness?

A

It is cyclical -> Cycle of poverty and mental illness

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5
Q

What does the cycle of poverty and mental illness explain?

A
  • Poverty increases mental illness through social causation

- Mental illness increases poverty through social drift

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6
Q

How does poverty increase mental illness through a social causation?

A
  • Social exclusion
  • High level of stress and worry
  • Reduced access to social capital and safety net
  • Malnutrition
  • Obstetric risks
  • Violence and trauma
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7
Q

How does mental illness increase poverty through a social drift?

A
  • Increased healthcare expenditure
  • Loss of employment
  • Reduced productivity
  • Stigma
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8
Q

What constitutes the debate between social causation and social drift/selection?

A

> Social causation better explains the relationship between poverty and mental health in the case of depression

> Social drift better explains the relationship between poverty and mental health in the case of schizophrenia

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9
Q

What is needed in order to comprehensively answer the questions surrounding the debate between social causation and social drift/selection?

A

Large well-characterised longitudinal studies in LMICs

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10
Q

What is novel about the 2015 United Nations’ sustainable development goals envisaged for 2030?

A

For the first time, mental health is included
- 3rd Goal: good health and well-being

  • Target 3.4: reduce premature mortality from noncommunicable disease by 1/3 ‘through prevention and treatment and promote mental health and well-being’
  • Target 3.5: ‘Strengthen the prevention and treatment of substance abuse, including narcotic drug abuse and harmful use of alcohol’
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11
Q

What is the relevance of the United Nations’ sustainable development targets (2015) concerning noncommunicable diseases and mental health?

A

The defined targets are critical for the inclusion of mental health in universal health coverage plans

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12
Q

What are the challenges of the United Nations’ sustainable development goals (2015) regarding mental health?

A

All of the remaining SDGs besides ‘good health and well-being’ have a bearing on mental health

  • > How do we clarify mechanisms of relationship between each SDG and mental health?
  • > Is it possible to harness political momentum from the SDGs to address social determinants of mental health and improve population mental health and well-being?
  • > Can we show that providing mental health care yields economic and environmental benefits?
  • > Is mental health both a means and an end of development?
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13
Q

What is the purpose of the defined social determinants of mental health and sustainable development goals framework (UN, 2015)?

A

Understand how achieving the SDGs can improve mental health

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14
Q

What does the social determinants of mental health and sustainable development goals framework consists of?

A

> 5 domains of SDGs:

  • Neighbourhood
  • Economic
  • Demographic
  • Social
  • Environmental events

> Distal factors
Proximal factors

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15
Q

Which approach is needed to understand how the social determinants influence mental health at various life stages?

A

A life course approach

  • e.g. socio-economic deprivation in early childhood has profound effects on mental health over the life course
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16
Q

What is the current evidence on how to break the cycle of poverty and mental illness in LMICs (Lund et al., 2011)?

A

Systematic reviews

> Addressing social causation of mental ill health

  • conditional and unconditional cash transfers
  • loans
  • asset promotion
  • > Some mental health benefits found, BUT exceptions and equivocal findings

> Addressing social drift of mental ill health towards poverty

  • family psycho-education
  • group/individual psychotherapy
  • psychotropic medication
  • community rehab program
  • residential drug rehab
  • epilepsy surgery
  • > clinical improvement AND improved functioning and better individual and household economic circumstances
17
Q

What are the two candidate interventions for mental health and the sustainable development goals?

A
  1. Targeting the cognitive and affective mechanisms of poverty
    - negative affective states (depression, stress, anxiety)
    - habitual behaviours (risk aversion)
  2. Cash transfers (e.g. in Kenya)
    - significant reduction in depression symptoms, particularly among young men
    - substantial improvements in psychological wellbeing and reductions in stress following receipt of unconditional cash transfers
18
Q

What is the research agenda to tackle the issues of poverty and mental illness?

A

> Longitudinal epidemiological studies in LMICs

> Intervention studies targeting specific AND distal mechanisms

  • linking cognitive neuroscience with behavioural economics
  • e.g. cash transfers combined with psychological interventions
19
Q

What are the potential ‘piggy back’ opportunities in the research agenda?

A
  • Include mental health outcomes in poverty alleviation and violence prevention trials (e.g. JPaL)
  • Include economic outcomes in mental health trials
20
Q

What does the initiative EconIPV-MH (2017/2018) consist of?

A
  • Systematic reviews of the economic (Econ) and intimate partner violence (IPV) impact of mental health trials (MH)
  • Working with mental health trials in the field to include economic and IPV outcome measures
21
Q

Which institutions have committed to fund and deliver interventions on poverty and mental illness?

A
  • World Bank
  • World Health Organisation (WHO)

-> strong commitment made during the ‘Out fo the Shadows’ meeting on mental health and global development in Washington DC (April 2016)

22
Q

What are the findings on the ‘global return on investment analysis’ of scalling-up treatment of depression and anxiety (Chisholm et al., 2016)?

A

1$ invested in care for depression and anxiety disorders

= 3$ to 5$ return on investment over the period of the SDGs (2015-2030)

23
Q

What is the key approach to address both social causation and social drift pathways?

A

Comprehensive coordinated multi-sectoral approach