过去17年澳大利亚心理健康的年龄、性别和时期估计

R. Burns, P. Butterworth, Dimity A. Crisp
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引用次数: 11

摘要

目的:描述澳大利亚人的长期心理健康是有限的,因为许多报告依赖于横断面研究,这些研究未能解释个人内部变化和与年龄相关的发展过程,这可能会使忽视这些现象的估计产生偏差。我们研究了27,519名澳大利亚成年人17年的心理健康轨迹。方法:来自澳大利亚家庭、收入和劳动力动态调查的27,519名18岁及以上参与者的家庭面板数据提供了自2001年以来17年间至少一次心理健康观察。参与者平均报告7.6次观察。每年使用简略健康调查-36心理健康量表对心理健康进行评估。结果:随着时间的推移,心理健康状况只有非常小的变化,而且只针对最年轻和最年长的成年人。随着时间的推移,有一致的证据表明,随着年龄的增长,心理健康状况会有所改善,尽管对于老年人来说,心理健康状况似乎会大幅下降。这些模式在不同性别之间是一致的。根据现有文献,男性在一生中报告的心理健康状况更好,尽管男性在晚年的心理健康状况下降尤为明显。结论:只有最年轻和最年长的受访者报告了心理健康状况的下降,并且仅在最近4-5年才有明显的下降。然而,下降的幅度很小,需要进一步的随访来确定这是否是这些特定年龄组心理健康实质性下降的趋势。相比之下,更一致的发现是,在过去17年中,澳大利亚的心理健康水平没有实质性变化。对基线年龄组心理健康轨迹的分析证实,年龄差异随时间的推移是一致的。
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Age, sex and period estimates of Australia’s mental health over the last 17 years
Objective: Describing the long-term mental health of Australians is limited as many reports rely on cross-sectional studies which fail to account for within-person changes and age-related developmental processes which may bias estimates which ignore these phenomena. We examined the 17-year trajectories of mental health in 27,519 Australian adults. Methods: Household panel data of 27,519 participants aged 18 years and over from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey provided at least one observation of mental health over a 17-year period from 2001. On average, participants reported 7.6 observations. Mental Health was assessed annually using the Short-Form Health Survey-36 mental health scale. Results: Over time, there were only very small changes in mental health and only for the youngest and oldest adults. Over time, there was consistent evidence for better metal health with increasing age, although for the very old, there appear to be substantial declines. These patterns were consistent between sex. In line with an existing literature, males reported better mental health over life span, although the declines of mental health in very-late-life are particularly pronounced for males. Conclusion: Decline in mental health was only reported by the youngest and oldest respondents, and was notable only in the last 4–5 years. However, the magnitude of the decline was small and further follow-up will be needed to determine whether this is a trend of substantive declining mental health for these specific age cohorts. In contrast, the more consistent finding is that there has been no substantive change in the level of mental health in Australia over the last 17 years. Analysis of the mental health trajectories of baseline age-cohorts confirmed that age differences are consistent over time.
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