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Publication
The Institutional Foundations of Medicalization: A Cross-National Analysis of Mental Health and Unemployment
Journal Contribution - Journal Article
In this study, we question (1) whether the relationship between unemployment and mental healthcare use, controlling for mental health status, varies across European countries and (2) whether these differences are patterned by a combination of unemployment and healthcare generosity. We hypothesize that medicalization of unemployment is stronger in countries where a low level of unemployment generosity is combined with a high level of healthcare generosity. A subsample of 36,306 working-age respondents from rounds 64.4 (2005-2006) and 73.2 (2010) of the cross-national survey Eurobarometer was used. Country-specific logistic regression and multilevel analyses, controlling for public disability spending, changes in government spending, economic capacity, and unemployment rate, were performed. We find that unemployment is medicalized, at least to some degree, in the majority of the 24 nations surveyed. Moreover, the medicalization of unemployment varies substantially across countries, corresponding to the combination of the level of unemployment and of healthcare generosity.
Journal: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
ISSN: 0022-1465
Issue: 3
Volume: 58
Pages: 272 - 290
Publication year:2017
- See also: The institutional foundations of medicalization
- See also: The Institutional Foundations of Medicalization: A Cross-national Analysis of Mental Health and Unemployment
- See also: The institutional foundations of medicalization : a cross-national analysis of mental health and unemployment