2014
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-1310
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How does unemployment affect self-assessed health? A systematic review focusing on subgroup effects

Abstract: BackgroundAlmost all studies on the effect on health from unemployment have concluded that unemployment is bad for your health. However, only a few review articles have dealt with this relation in recent years, and none of them have focused on the analysis of subgroups such as age, gender, and marital status. The objective of our article is to review how unemployment relates to self-assessed health with a focus on its effect on subgroups.MethodsA search was performed in Web of Science to find articles that mea… Show more

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Cited by 157 publications
(169 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…Education has no effect on self-rated health. Consistent with previous findings in the literature, the results here indicate that unemployment is negatively associated with self-rated health (Giatti et al, 2011;Carlier et al, 2013;Norström et al, 2014). In other words, the unemployed were more likely to report poor health.…”
Section: Environmental Management and Sustainable Developmentsupporting
confidence: 91%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Education has no effect on self-rated health. Consistent with previous findings in the literature, the results here indicate that unemployment is negatively associated with self-rated health (Giatti et al, 2011;Carlier et al, 2013;Norström et al, 2014). In other words, the unemployed were more likely to report poor health.…”
Section: Environmental Management and Sustainable Developmentsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Also, unemployed people are found to report poor self-rated health (e.g., Giatti et al, 2011;Carlier et al, 2013;Norström et al, 2014) and this finding may hold irrespective of whether personal or contextual characteristics are controlled for (Giatti et al, 2011). The literature also shows that income is associated with self-rated health (e.g., Kennedy et al, 1998;Shibuya et al, 2002;Addai & Adjei, 2014).…”
Section: Environmental Management and Sustainable Developmentmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…There is considerable evidence that men and women differ not only in their employment behavior and mental health, but also in their mental health responses to their own employment shocks as well as to those of others around them (see Novo et al 2001;Paul and Moser 2009;Marcus 2013;Bubonya et al 2014;Norström et al 2014). Given this, there is every reason to believe that the dynamic relationship between mental and economic well-being will be gendered as well.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…recessions, local unemployment rates, welfare systems) (McKeeRyan et al 2005;Paul and Moser 2009;Norström et al 2014). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Die Einflüsse von makroökonomischen Variablen wie Einkommensungleichheit wurden ebenfalls metaanalytisch verifiziert. Es gibt international wenige Längs-schnitterhebungen zur Gesundheit von Arbeitslosen und kaum Panelanalysen [14,20]. Das Ziel der vorliegenden Sekundäranalyse ist es daher, Erkenntnisse über die Gesundheit von Arbeitslosen in Deutschland zu gewinnen, Personengruppen mit erhöhten Krankheitsrisiken in Arbeitslosigkeit zu identifizieren, die Wechselwirkungen zwischen Arbeitsmarktintegration und Gesundheit im Zeitverlauf zu untersuchen und Implikationen für die Gesundheitsförderung abzuleiten.…”
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