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The relationship between personal unsecured debt and mental and physical health: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TLDR
The majority of studies found that more severe debt is related to worse health; however causality is hard to establish, and future longitudinal research is needed to determine causality and establish potential mechanisms and mediators of the relationship.
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This article is published in Clinical Psychology Review.The article was published on 2013-12-01 and is currently open access. It has received 301 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Mental health & Unsecured debt.

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Citations
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Associations Between Socioeconomic Factors and Alcohol Outcomes.

TL;DR: Knowing the underlying mechanisms of the relationship between SES and alcohol outcomes should be applied toward the development of multilevel interventions that address not only individual-level risks but also economic disparities that have precipitated and maintained a disproportionate level of alcohol-related consequences among more marginalized and vulnerable populations.

Socioeconomic inequalities in suicide: an European comparative study.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a European overview of socio-economic inequalities in suicide mortality among men and women, and found that the greater the socioeconomic disadvantage, the higher the risk of suicide.
Posted Content

Socioeconomic Inequalities in Health in 22 European Countries

TL;DR: Variation across Europe in the magnitude of inequalities in health associated with socioeconomic status is observed, which might be reduced by improving educational opportunities, income distribution, health-related behavior, or access to health care.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Longitudinal Study of Financial Difficulties and Mental Health in a National Sample of British Undergraduate Students.

TL;DR: This paper examined longitudinal relationships over time between financial variables and mental health in students and found that greater financial difficulties predicted greater depression and stress cross-sectionally, and also predicted poorer anxiety, global mental health and alcohol dependence over time.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Financial strain and smoking cessation among racially/ethnically diverse smokers

TL;DR: Greater financial strain predicted lower cessation rates among racially/ethnically diverse smokers and highlighted the impact of economic concerns on smoking cessation and the need to address financial strain in smoking cessation interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple measures of socioeconomic circumstances and common mental disorders.

TL;DR: Past and present economic difficulties were strongly associated with common mental disorders, whereas conventional past and present socioeconomic status measures showed weak or slightly reverse associations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Home ownership, mortgages and psychological distress

TL;DR: This article used an expanded measure to differentiate home owners with mortgages, from those who do not have mortgages and from those living in rental accommodation, revealing a gradient in housing tenure and psychological distress; individuals in rental situations report the highest levels of distress, home owners without mortgages the lowest levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between personal debt and specific common mental disorders

TL;DR: Debt is one of the major risk factors for CMD and both health services and financial services need to be alert to the association and adapt and train their respective services accordingly so that people in debt can access help for mental disorders and people with mental disorders canAccess help for debt.
Journal ArticleDOI

Socioeconomic status and the risk of major depression: the Canadian National Population Health Survey

TL;DR: SES inequalities in the risk of MDE exist in the general population but the inequalities may depend on measures of SES, sex and employment status, and these should be considered in interventions of reducing inequalities in MDE.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (9)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "The relationship between personal unsecured debt and mental and physical health: a systematic review and meta-analysis" ?

This paper systematically reviews the relationship between personal unsecured debt and health. Future longitudinal research is needed to determine causality and establish potential mechanisms and mediators of the relationship. 

This area needs further research, however it suggests, at an epidemiological level, that recent increases in personal debt in the UK ( Credit Action, 2013 ), may only impact mental health if they lead to an increase in stress and worry about debt. The specific mechanisms by which debt is related to health are therefore key to examine in further research in order to develop preventative interventions both to ensure that those with poor health are not at greater risk of problem debt, and that those in debt are not at a greater risk of developing mental health problems. Only three databases were searched, though the relatively small number of papers found via a hand and cited-by search suggest that the search was comprehensive. Nonetheless this review suggests that personal unsecured debt is related to health, and is therefore important to consider by health professionals. 

The main problem with the current research is that the vast majorityof studies are cross-sectional, meaning that causality cannot be established. 

The specificpopulations included studies with health service users (n=8), parents (n=2), ethnic minorities(n=4), farmers (n=2), older adults (n=4) and problem gamblers (n=2). 

The US studies also tended to focus on other health riskbehaviours, such as unprotected sex and drink-driving, and also focused on credit card debtspecifically. 

Papers were not excluded on the basis of year of publication, study design,measures used, participant characteristics or sample size. 

Odds ratios demonstrate more than athree-fold risk of a mental disorder in those with debt, or alternatively a three-fold risk ofdebt in those with a mental disorder. 

In the Method, Search Procedure the authors have changed „Classes‟ into „Classed‟ - In Appendix B (Characteristics of Panel Surveys) the authors have added „years‟ to 4-6. 

Three studies found an effect for worry aboutdebt rather than debt per se, whilst two found that financial strain rather than debt was relatedto health.