Mental health of university students of Pakistan and Germany and the right to health care

IF 1.2 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare Pub Date : 2023-05-05 DOI:10.1108/ijhrh-05-2022-0040
Akhtar Bibi, Muyu Lin, J. Brailovskaia, J. Margraf
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This study aims to examine the gender differences in mental health among Pakistan and German university students and focuses on their right to seek mental health care.\n\n\nDesign/methodology/approach\nData on depression, anxiety and stress symptoms, as well as positive mental health (PMH), resilience, social support and life satisfaction, were gathered from Pakistani and German students.\n\n\nFindings\nIn contrast to the Pakistani group, where no such gender differences were seen, women in Germany reported higher degrees of stress, anxiety and depression, as well as a lower level of overall good mental health. In comparison to German men and women, Pakistani women scored equally high on resilience. While gender had no bearing on life happiness in either Pakistan or Germany, women in both countries perceived more social support than men did.\n\n\nResearch limitations/implications\nThe study’s strengths include its large sample size and battery of mental health measures. The results of partial weak measurement Invariance (MI) on the stress subscale underlined the importance of using MI in cross-cultural studies. The validity of a direct comparisons on sum score between different language versions or country samples shall be cautious. Still, there are limitations. Firstly, the authors did not differentiate gender and biological sex, and there was no group of non-binary gender. Pakistani (N = 1,840) and German (N = 7,890) students were in unequal numbers. Again, only university students were sampled, so the results cannot be generalised to older (probably less educated) populations. Self-reported data that mainly obtained via online survey were the third limitation. This design is cost-effective and easy to administer for cross-cultural survey research. However, social desirability and memory bias are common in self-report inventories. Fourthly, although English is an official language in Pakistan and the medium of instruction in education, the authors recommend future study to use questionnaires that have been translated and validated into Urdu (Pakistan’s national language) and investigate gender differences in a general population. Fifthly, this is a cross-sectional survey; the authors were not able to explore the causality or risk factors that contribute to the poor mental well-being in Pakistan students in general or the relatively worse mental health in German women. Future studies may investigate the mechanism behind the phenomena observed in this study with longitudinal or experimental design. Last but not least, Germany and Pakistan differ in so many different aspects from culture, religions and history to social structure and economic status, which make it hard to claim whether the observed differences were due to national differences, cultural differences, economic differences, gender inequality differences or other effects. It would be helpful for future studies to include more country samples with clear definitions of different “culture” aspects for a better understanding of gender differences in other countries and in different mental well-being constructs.\n\n\nPractical implications\nThe current study is the first attempt to compare the gender difference patterns in positive and negative mental health between European and South Asian counties and focuses on gender-specific approaches. Although Pakistani university students reported in general worse mental well-being, the differences between the two genders in mental health (e.g. depression, anxiety, general PMH) were not as pronounced as in the German student sample. Gender comparisons in these mental health constructs would help to improve protective factors against mental illness and to develop appropriate management programmes based on cultural differences. The results suggest that the gender differences found in western countries cannot always be directly translated into the South Asian cultural framework. Our results also highlight the importance of improving the general situation of Pakistan (students) instead of focusing on one gender. At the same time, in Germany, prevention and intervention plans are more warranted for women. It could be that once the general situation in Pakistan is improved, the gender-related differences in mental health will be clearly observed.\n\n\nOriginality/value\nThese findings imply the significance of cultural context when inferring gender variations in mental health. Moreover, it supports the advancement of comprehensive policies to reduce gender-related mental health inequalities and focuses on the equal rights of men and women to get mental health care.\n","PeriodicalId":14129,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/ijhrh-05-2022-0040","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Purpose Poor mental health in men and women is attributable to disparities in physical traits, social roles, power and health-seeking behaviours. This study aims to examine the gender differences in mental health among Pakistan and German university students and focuses on their right to seek mental health care. Design/methodology/approach Data on depression, anxiety and stress symptoms, as well as positive mental health (PMH), resilience, social support and life satisfaction, were gathered from Pakistani and German students. Findings In contrast to the Pakistani group, where no such gender differences were seen, women in Germany reported higher degrees of stress, anxiety and depression, as well as a lower level of overall good mental health. In comparison to German men and women, Pakistani women scored equally high on resilience. While gender had no bearing on life happiness in either Pakistan or Germany, women in both countries perceived more social support than men did. Research limitations/implications The study’s strengths include its large sample size and battery of mental health measures. The results of partial weak measurement Invariance (MI) on the stress subscale underlined the importance of using MI in cross-cultural studies. The validity of a direct comparisons on sum score between different language versions or country samples shall be cautious. Still, there are limitations. Firstly, the authors did not differentiate gender and biological sex, and there was no group of non-binary gender. Pakistani (N = 1,840) and German (N = 7,890) students were in unequal numbers. Again, only university students were sampled, so the results cannot be generalised to older (probably less educated) populations. Self-reported data that mainly obtained via online survey were the third limitation. This design is cost-effective and easy to administer for cross-cultural survey research. However, social desirability and memory bias are common in self-report inventories. Fourthly, although English is an official language in Pakistan and the medium of instruction in education, the authors recommend future study to use questionnaires that have been translated and validated into Urdu (Pakistan’s national language) and investigate gender differences in a general population. Fifthly, this is a cross-sectional survey; the authors were not able to explore the causality or risk factors that contribute to the poor mental well-being in Pakistan students in general or the relatively worse mental health in German women. Future studies may investigate the mechanism behind the phenomena observed in this study with longitudinal or experimental design. Last but not least, Germany and Pakistan differ in so many different aspects from culture, religions and history to social structure and economic status, which make it hard to claim whether the observed differences were due to national differences, cultural differences, economic differences, gender inequality differences or other effects. It would be helpful for future studies to include more country samples with clear definitions of different “culture” aspects for a better understanding of gender differences in other countries and in different mental well-being constructs. Practical implications The current study is the first attempt to compare the gender difference patterns in positive and negative mental health between European and South Asian counties and focuses on gender-specific approaches. Although Pakistani university students reported in general worse mental well-being, the differences between the two genders in mental health (e.g. depression, anxiety, general PMH) were not as pronounced as in the German student sample. Gender comparisons in these mental health constructs would help to improve protective factors against mental illness and to develop appropriate management programmes based on cultural differences. The results suggest that the gender differences found in western countries cannot always be directly translated into the South Asian cultural framework. Our results also highlight the importance of improving the general situation of Pakistan (students) instead of focusing on one gender. At the same time, in Germany, prevention and intervention plans are more warranted for women. It could be that once the general situation in Pakistan is improved, the gender-related differences in mental health will be clearly observed. Originality/value These findings imply the significance of cultural context when inferring gender variations in mental health. Moreover, it supports the advancement of comprehensive policies to reduce gender-related mental health inequalities and focuses on the equal rights of men and women to get mental health care.
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巴基斯坦和德国大学生的心理健康与保健权
目的男性和女性心理健康状况不佳是由于身体特征、社会角色、权力和寻求健康行为方面的差异。本研究旨在调查巴基斯坦和德国大学生在心理健康方面的性别差异,并关注他们寻求心理健康护理的权利。设计/方法/方法从巴基斯坦和德国学生中收集有关抑郁、焦虑和压力症状以及积极心理健康(PMH)、复原力、社会支持和生活满意度的数据。调查结果与巴基斯坦组相比,在巴基斯坦组中没有发现这种性别差异,德国女性的压力、焦虑和抑郁程度更高,整体良好心理健康水平更低。与德国男性和女性相比,巴基斯坦女性在韧性方面得分同样高。虽然性别对巴基斯坦或德国的生活幸福感没有影响,但这两个国家的女性都比男性获得了更多的社会支持。研究局限性/含义该研究的优势包括样本量大和一系列心理健康指标。压力分量表的部分弱测量不变性(MI)结果强调了在跨文化研究中使用MI的重要性。不同语言版本或国家样本之间的总分直接比较的有效性应谨慎。尽管如此,还是有局限性的。首先,作者没有区分性别和生理性别,也没有非二元性别组。巴基斯坦(1840人)和德国(7890人)的学生人数不等。同样,只有大学生被抽样,因此结果不能推广到年龄较大(可能受教育程度较低)的人群。主要通过在线调查获得的自我报告数据是第三个限制。这种设计具有成本效益,易于管理跨文化调查研究。然而,社会愿望和记忆偏见在自我报告清单中很常见。第四,尽管英语是巴基斯坦的官方语言和教育教学语言,但作者建议未来的研究使用已翻译并验证为乌尔都语(巴基斯坦的国语)的问卷,并调查普通人群中的性别差异。第五,这是一项横断面调查;作者无法探究导致巴基斯坦学生总体心理健康状况不佳或德国女性心理健康状况相对较差的因果关系或风险因素。未来的研究可能会通过纵向或实验设计来研究本研究中观察到的现象背后的机制。最后但同样重要的是,德国和巴基斯坦在文化、宗教和历史、社会结构和经济地位等许多不同方面存在差异,这使得很难断言观察到的差异是由于民族差异、文化差异、经济差异、性别不平等差异还是其他影响。未来的研究将有助于纳入更多对不同“文化”方面有明确定义的国家样本,以更好地了解其他国家和不同心理健康结构中的性别差异。实际意义本研究首次尝试比较欧洲和南亚国家在积极和消极心理健康方面的性别差异模式,并侧重于针对性别的方法。尽管巴基斯坦大学生的心理健康状况普遍较差,但两性在心理健康方面的差异(如抑郁、焦虑、一般PMH)不如德国学生样本明显。在这些心理健康结构中进行性别比较将有助于改善对心理疾病的保护因素,并根据文化差异制定适当的管理方案。研究结果表明,西方国家的性别差异不可能总是直接转化为南亚文化框架。我们的研究结果还强调了改善巴基斯坦(学生)总体状况的重要性,而不是只关注一种性别。与此同时,在德国,对妇女的预防和干预计划更有必要。一旦巴基斯坦的总体情况得到改善,心理健康方面与性别相关的差异将得到明显观察。原创性/价值这些发现暗示了文化背景在推断心理健康中的性别差异时的重要性。此外,它支持推进减少与性别有关的心理健康不平等的综合政策,并侧重于男女获得心理健康护理的平等权利。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: nternational Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare (IJHRH) is an international, peer reviewed journal with a unique practical approach to promoting race equality, inclusion and human rights in health and social care. The journal publishes scholarly and double blind peer-reviewed papers of the highest standard, including case studies and book reviews. IJHRH aims include: -To explore what is currently known about discrimination and disadvantage with a particular focus on health and social care -Push the barriers of the human rights discourse by identifying new avenues for healthcare practice and policy internationally -Create bridges between policymakers, practitioners and researchers -Identify and understand the social determinants of health equity and practical interventions to overcome barriers at national and international levels. The journal welcomes papers which use varied approaches, including discussion of theory, comparative studies, systematic evaluation of interventions, analysis of qualitative data and study of health and social care institutions and the political process. Papers published in IJHRH: -Clearly demonstrate the implications of the research -Provide evidence-rich information -Provoke reflection and support critical analysis of both challenges and strengths -Share examples of best practice and ‘what works’, including user perspectives IJHRH is a hugely valuable source of information for researchers, academics, students, practitioners, managers, policy-makers, commissioning bodies, social workers, psychologists, nurses, voluntary sector workers, service users and carers internationally.
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