社论:社会经济不平等与儿童和青少年心理健康。

IF 6.8 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS Child and Adolescent Mental Health Pub Date : 2024-08-18 DOI:10.1111/camh.12699
Kate E. Pickett, Richard G. Wilkinson
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Even within countries, there are surprisingly few sources of data – no data on child mental illness could be included in the recent Child and Adolescent Thriving Index 1.0 in the USA (Pickett, <span>2022</span>). To try and understand both variation in child and adolescent mental health, and the causes of such variation, we have to use proxy measures, such as life satisfaction, or measures such as the adolescent suicide rate that represent a very extreme tip of an iceberg of mental distress. In their most recent report on child well-being in high income countries, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), created an index of mental well-being that includes the percentage of 15 year olds reporting high life satisfaction and the suicide rate for 15–19 year olds (https://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/pdf/Report-Card-16-Worlds-of-Influence-child-wellbeing.pdf). On this index, the Netherlands ranks top and New Zealand bottom, and there is much variation in both measures. Over 90% of children in the Netherlands have high life satisfaction, but only 64% of UK children say the same. In Greece, the teenage suicide rate is 1.4 per 100,000 adolescents, in New Zealand that figure is 10 times higher at 14.9 per 100,000.</p><p>Nevertheless, there are now a number of studies suggesting that income inequality, the gap between rich and poor in a society, is robustly associated with measures of mental well-being in children and young people (Alemán-Díaz et al., <span>2016</span>), whether that is child mental illness in relation to income inequality across the 50 US states (Wilkinson &amp; Pickett, <span>2009</span>), happiness and psychological distress across regions of China (Du, Chi, &amp; King, <span>2019</span>) or psychological symptoms across 17 high income countries (Dierckens et al., <span>2020</span>). We have also shown that changes in income inequality are related to changes in child well-being – as countries become more or less equal their child well-being rises or falls (Pickett &amp; Wilkinson, <span>2015</span>).</p><p>Within countries, socio-economic position has a well-described and profound impact on all aspects of child and adolescent mental health, creating social gradients and inequalities in everything from socio-emotional behaviour problems (Straatmann, Campbell, Rutherford, Wickham, &amp; Taylor-Robinson, <span>2017</span>) to schizophrenia (Hakulinen, Webb, Pedersen, Agerbo, &amp; Mok, <span>2020</span>). Even conditions long thought to be associated with affluence, such as eating disorders, present across the full range of socioeconomic backgrounds (Huryk, Drury, &amp; Loeb, <span>2021</span>). Figure 1 is a framework for visualising how socio-economic inequality <i>between</i> societies interacts with socio-economic position <i>within</i> societies, creating steeper social gradients in health outcomes. We need to be mindful of both influences when thinking about policy and practice solutions for child and adolescent mental health and health inequalities.</p><p>The pathways through which children and adolescents are sensitive to structural inequalities are complex and multi-faceted. Some of the pathways involve a lack of material resources, including access to care and treatment for mental health issues, but psychosocial factors are central. Our own explanatory theory is that inequality impacts the quality of social relations, shifting the balance between evolved social strategies for dealing with more stressful dominance relations or more supportive relationships based on reciprocity and cooperation. In more unequal societies, our sensitivity to status is heightened – social status and position become more salient making social comparisons more invidious, and status anxiety is increased (Layte &amp; Whelan, <span>2014</span>), with implications for psychological responses involving dominance (e.g., self enhancement, narcissism), submission (e.g., depression) or behaviours such as addictions.</p><p>Some of the pathways through which inequality affects children and adolescents are indirect, acting though the effects of inequality on parents, caregivers and other family members, (e.g., higher prevalence of their own mental health problems, longer working hours, higher levels of household debt) raising levels of chronic stress within families. Research has shown that the prevalence of child maltreatment is higher in more unequal societies. Inequality also affects children's own direct exposure to the impacts of inequality, for example, levels of bullying are higher and levels of generalised trust are lower (Wilkinson &amp; Pickett, <span>2017</span>, <span>2018</span>).</p><p>Relations with peers have always been important for children and young people's mental well-being. The Wellcome Trust views social relations as an ‘active ingredient’ for mental health, recognising that for young people, in particular, social relationships can support them through critical stages of the formation of their social identities and offer resources that increase resilience to depression and anxiety. For today's children and young people, however, social relationships, including with peers, increasingly take place on digital platforms. Ninety-seven percent of young people use at least one social media platform. That exposes them more than any previous generation not just to cyber bullying, but to the judgements of other people, exactly the processes that can exacerbate status anxiety. Social media can also be a positive source of social contact for many young people and this support was helpful for many of them through the isolation they experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic; research findings on the impact of social media on the mental health of children and young people are very mixed, although a recent systematic review of 126 studies and a meta-analysis of 76 suggests an effect on adverse health-related behaviours among adolescents, such as alcohol and drug consumption (Purba, Henderson, Baxter, Katikireddi, &amp; Pearce, <span>2023</span>). We are not aware of any studies that have examined whether or not associations between social media use and mental well-being vary by societal income inequality, but this might be a fruitful area for future research.</p><p>Children and adolescents are not, of course, simply passive recipients of the broader social determinants that shape their mental health. How they perceive inequality, how they feel about their own and their family's social status within society also affects their mental health and well-being. Research shows that young people who perceive themselves as belonging to a poorer family than the families of their friends experience worse mental health and more interpersonal difficulties. Worryingly, increased sensitivity to inequality may actually make it more difficult to study these phenomena. In an ongoing cohort study of adolescents in the North of England, co-production work revealed a reluctance to self-report relative subjective social status, with young people expressing a dislike of being asked to compare themselves to others (Moss, Kelly, Bird, Nutting, &amp; Pickett, <span>2023</span>).</p><p>However, for those concerned with social justice, it is heartening to recognise that, while children and young adults may be suffering the consequences of inequality, they can also be important advocates for positive change. A recent UK study showed that young people were more likely than older people to be aware of, and concerned about, inequality. There are also positive examples across the world of young people participating as active citizens and campaigning against inequality (Bruselius-Jensen, Pitti, &amp; Tisdall, <span>2021</span>). Such participation may not only help to promote change but may also mitigate against the mental health impacts of inequality by giving young people social connections and a sense of solidarity, as well a sense of purpose and agency.</p><p>No ethical approval was required for this article.</p>","PeriodicalId":49291,"journal":{"name":"Child and Adolescent Mental Health","volume":"29 3","pages":"308-310"},"PeriodicalIF":6.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/camh.12699","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial: Socio-economic inequality and child and adolescent mental health\",\"authors\":\"Kate E. Pickett,&nbsp;Richard G. 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Even within countries, there are surprisingly few sources of data – no data on child mental illness could be included in the recent Child and Adolescent Thriving Index 1.0 in the USA (Pickett, <span>2022</span>). To try and understand both variation in child and adolescent mental health, and the causes of such variation, we have to use proxy measures, such as life satisfaction, or measures such as the adolescent suicide rate that represent a very extreme tip of an iceberg of mental distress. In their most recent report on child well-being in high income countries, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), created an index of mental well-being that includes the percentage of 15 year olds reporting high life satisfaction and the suicide rate for 15–19 year olds (https://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/pdf/Report-Card-16-Worlds-of-Influence-child-wellbeing.pdf). On this index, the Netherlands ranks top and New Zealand bottom, and there is much variation in both measures. 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We have also shown that changes in income inequality are related to changes in child well-being – as countries become more or less equal their child well-being rises or falls (Pickett &amp; Wilkinson, <span>2015</span>).</p><p>Within countries, socio-economic position has a well-described and profound impact on all aspects of child and adolescent mental health, creating social gradients and inequalities in everything from socio-emotional behaviour problems (Straatmann, Campbell, Rutherford, Wickham, &amp; Taylor-Robinson, <span>2017</span>) to schizophrenia (Hakulinen, Webb, Pedersen, Agerbo, &amp; Mok, <span>2020</span>). Even conditions long thought to be associated with affluence, such as eating disorders, present across the full range of socioeconomic backgrounds (Huryk, Drury, &amp; Loeb, <span>2021</span>). Figure 1 is a framework for visualising how socio-economic inequality <i>between</i> societies interacts with socio-economic position <i>within</i> societies, creating steeper social gradients in health outcomes. We need to be mindful of both influences when thinking about policy and practice solutions for child and adolescent mental health and health inequalities.</p><p>The pathways through which children and adolescents are sensitive to structural inequalities are complex and multi-faceted. Some of the pathways involve a lack of material resources, including access to care and treatment for mental health issues, but psychosocial factors are central. Our own explanatory theory is that inequality impacts the quality of social relations, shifting the balance between evolved social strategies for dealing with more stressful dominance relations or more supportive relationships based on reciprocity and cooperation. In more unequal societies, our sensitivity to status is heightened – social status and position become more salient making social comparisons more invidious, and status anxiety is increased (Layte &amp; Whelan, <span>2014</span>), with implications for psychological responses involving dominance (e.g., self enhancement, narcissism), submission (e.g., depression) or behaviours such as addictions.</p><p>Some of the pathways through which inequality affects children and adolescents are indirect, acting though the effects of inequality on parents, caregivers and other family members, (e.g., higher prevalence of their own mental health problems, longer working hours, higher levels of household debt) raising levels of chronic stress within families. Research has shown that the prevalence of child maltreatment is higher in more unequal societies. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究表明,在更加不平等的社会中,虐待儿童的发生率更高。不平等也会影响儿童自身直接受到不平等的影响,例如,欺凌程度更高,普遍信任程度更低(Wilkinson &amp; Pickett, 2017, 2018)。威康信托基金会将社会关系视为心理健康的 "积极成分",认为尤其对于青少年而言,社会关系可以在他们形成社会身份的关键阶段为他们提供支持,并提供资源以增强他们对抑郁和焦虑的复原力。然而,对于今天的儿童和青少年来说,社交关系,包括与同龄人的社交关系,越来越多地发生在数字平台上。97%的年轻人至少使用一个社交媒体平台。这使得他们比以往任何一代人都更容易受到网络欺凌和他人评价的影响,而这恰恰会加剧身份焦虑。对许多年轻人来说,社交媒体也可以成为社交接触的积极来源,这种支持有助于他们中的许多人度过 COVID-19 大流行期间所经历的孤独;关于社交媒体对儿童和年轻人心理健康影响的研究结果喜忧参半,尽管最近对 126 项研究进行的系统回顾和对 76 项研究进行的荟萃分析表明,社交媒体对青少年与健康有关的不良行为有影响,如酗酒和吸毒(Purba, Henderson, Baxter, Katikireddi, &amp; Pearce, 2023)。当然,儿童和青少年并不只是被动地接受影响其心理健康的更广泛的社会决定因素。他们如何看待不平等,如何看待自己和家人在社会中的社会地位,也会影响他们的心理健康和幸福。研究表明,那些认为自己的家庭比朋友家更贫穷的年轻人,其心理健康状况会更 差,人际交往方面的困难也会更多。令人担忧的是,对不平等现象的日益敏感可能实际上会增加研究这些现象的难度。在一项正在进行的针对英格兰北部青少年的队列研究中,共同生产工作显示,青少年不愿意自我报告相对的主观社会地位,他们表示不喜欢被要求将自己与他人进行比较(Moss, Kelly, Bird, Nutting, &amp; Pickett, 2023)。然而,对于那些关注社会正义的人来说,令人欣慰的是,虽然儿童和青少年可能正在遭受不平等的后果,但他们也可以成为积极变革的重要倡导者。英国最近的一项研究表明,年轻人比年长者更有可能意识到并关注不平等问题。世界各地也有年轻人作为积极公民参与反对不平等运动的正面例子(Bruselius-Jensen, Pitti, &amp; Tisdall, 2021)。这种参与不仅有助于推动变革,还可以通过赋予年轻人社会联系和团结意识,以及目的感和能动性,减轻不平等对心理健康的影响。
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Editorial: Socio-economic inequality and child and adolescent mental health

It would be hard to find anyone, including politicians anywhere on the political spectrum, who would not agree that a society should look after its children well – giving them a good start in life, protecting their interests and their health and wellbeing, and promoting their development and education. Our children are our future – our long-term societal well-being depends on them. And there is widespread contemporary concern for the mental health of children and adolescents, following the global COVID-19 pandemic.

In this context, it is perhaps surprising that it is so difficult to compare different societies in terms of child and adolescent mental health, but it remains the case that there are no sources of high quality, internationally comparable data on mental illness in children and young people. Even within countries, there are surprisingly few sources of data – no data on child mental illness could be included in the recent Child and Adolescent Thriving Index 1.0 in the USA (Pickett, 2022). To try and understand both variation in child and adolescent mental health, and the causes of such variation, we have to use proxy measures, such as life satisfaction, or measures such as the adolescent suicide rate that represent a very extreme tip of an iceberg of mental distress. In their most recent report on child well-being in high income countries, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), created an index of mental well-being that includes the percentage of 15 year olds reporting high life satisfaction and the suicide rate for 15–19 year olds (https://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/pdf/Report-Card-16-Worlds-of-Influence-child-wellbeing.pdf). On this index, the Netherlands ranks top and New Zealand bottom, and there is much variation in both measures. Over 90% of children in the Netherlands have high life satisfaction, but only 64% of UK children say the same. In Greece, the teenage suicide rate is 1.4 per 100,000 adolescents, in New Zealand that figure is 10 times higher at 14.9 per 100,000.

Nevertheless, there are now a number of studies suggesting that income inequality, the gap between rich and poor in a society, is robustly associated with measures of mental well-being in children and young people (Alemán-Díaz et al., 2016), whether that is child mental illness in relation to income inequality across the 50 US states (Wilkinson & Pickett, 2009), happiness and psychological distress across regions of China (Du, Chi, & King, 2019) or psychological symptoms across 17 high income countries (Dierckens et al., 2020). We have also shown that changes in income inequality are related to changes in child well-being – as countries become more or less equal their child well-being rises or falls (Pickett & Wilkinson, 2015).

Within countries, socio-economic position has a well-described and profound impact on all aspects of child and adolescent mental health, creating social gradients and inequalities in everything from socio-emotional behaviour problems (Straatmann, Campbell, Rutherford, Wickham, & Taylor-Robinson, 2017) to schizophrenia (Hakulinen, Webb, Pedersen, Agerbo, & Mok, 2020). Even conditions long thought to be associated with affluence, such as eating disorders, present across the full range of socioeconomic backgrounds (Huryk, Drury, & Loeb, 2021). Figure 1 is a framework for visualising how socio-economic inequality between societies interacts with socio-economic position within societies, creating steeper social gradients in health outcomes. We need to be mindful of both influences when thinking about policy and practice solutions for child and adolescent mental health and health inequalities.

The pathways through which children and adolescents are sensitive to structural inequalities are complex and multi-faceted. Some of the pathways involve a lack of material resources, including access to care and treatment for mental health issues, but psychosocial factors are central. Our own explanatory theory is that inequality impacts the quality of social relations, shifting the balance between evolved social strategies for dealing with more stressful dominance relations or more supportive relationships based on reciprocity and cooperation. In more unequal societies, our sensitivity to status is heightened – social status and position become more salient making social comparisons more invidious, and status anxiety is increased (Layte & Whelan, 2014), with implications for psychological responses involving dominance (e.g., self enhancement, narcissism), submission (e.g., depression) or behaviours such as addictions.

Some of the pathways through which inequality affects children and adolescents are indirect, acting though the effects of inequality on parents, caregivers and other family members, (e.g., higher prevalence of their own mental health problems, longer working hours, higher levels of household debt) raising levels of chronic stress within families. Research has shown that the prevalence of child maltreatment is higher in more unequal societies. Inequality also affects children's own direct exposure to the impacts of inequality, for example, levels of bullying are higher and levels of generalised trust are lower (Wilkinson & Pickett, 2017, 2018).

Relations with peers have always been important for children and young people's mental well-being. The Wellcome Trust views social relations as an ‘active ingredient’ for mental health, recognising that for young people, in particular, social relationships can support them through critical stages of the formation of their social identities and offer resources that increase resilience to depression and anxiety. For today's children and young people, however, social relationships, including with peers, increasingly take place on digital platforms. Ninety-seven percent of young people use at least one social media platform. That exposes them more than any previous generation not just to cyber bullying, but to the judgements of other people, exactly the processes that can exacerbate status anxiety. Social media can also be a positive source of social contact for many young people and this support was helpful for many of them through the isolation they experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic; research findings on the impact of social media on the mental health of children and young people are very mixed, although a recent systematic review of 126 studies and a meta-analysis of 76 suggests an effect on adverse health-related behaviours among adolescents, such as alcohol and drug consumption (Purba, Henderson, Baxter, Katikireddi, & Pearce, 2023). We are not aware of any studies that have examined whether or not associations between social media use and mental well-being vary by societal income inequality, but this might be a fruitful area for future research.

Children and adolescents are not, of course, simply passive recipients of the broader social determinants that shape their mental health. How they perceive inequality, how they feel about their own and their family's social status within society also affects their mental health and well-being. Research shows that young people who perceive themselves as belonging to a poorer family than the families of their friends experience worse mental health and more interpersonal difficulties. Worryingly, increased sensitivity to inequality may actually make it more difficult to study these phenomena. In an ongoing cohort study of adolescents in the North of England, co-production work revealed a reluctance to self-report relative subjective social status, with young people expressing a dislike of being asked to compare themselves to others (Moss, Kelly, Bird, Nutting, & Pickett, 2023).

However, for those concerned with social justice, it is heartening to recognise that, while children and young adults may be suffering the consequences of inequality, they can also be important advocates for positive change. A recent UK study showed that young people were more likely than older people to be aware of, and concerned about, inequality. There are also positive examples across the world of young people participating as active citizens and campaigning against inequality (Bruselius-Jensen, Pitti, & Tisdall, 2021). Such participation may not only help to promote change but may also mitigate against the mental health impacts of inequality by giving young people social connections and a sense of solidarity, as well a sense of purpose and agency.

No ethical approval was required for this article.

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来源期刊
Child and Adolescent Mental Health
Child and Adolescent Mental Health PEDIATRICS-PSYCHIATRY
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
3.30%
发文量
77
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Child and Adolescent Mental Health (CAMH) publishes high quality, peer-reviewed child and adolescent mental health services research of relevance to academics, clinicians and commissioners internationally. The journal''s principal aim is to foster evidence-based clinical practice and clinically orientated research among clinicians and health services researchers working with children and adolescents, parents and their families in relation to or with a particular interest in mental health. CAMH publishes reviews, original articles, and pilot reports of innovative approaches, interventions, clinical methods and service developments. The journal has regular sections on Measurement Issues, Innovations in Practice, Global Child Mental Health and Humanities. All published papers should be of direct relevance to mental health practitioners and clearly draw out clinical implications for the field.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Editorial: Advancing equity, diversity and inclusion through culturally sensitive collaboration and training Clinical research updates Debate: Bridging the gap – role of nonspecialists in child and adolescent mental health care Debate: How much should nonspecialists be involved in mental health care for children and young people when resources are limited? Working with police forces to improve mental health crisis care for young people
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