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Prevalence of perceived discrimination and associations with mental health inequalities in the UK during 2019-2020: A cross-sectional study
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Prevalence of perceived discrimination and associations with mental health inequalities in the UK during 2019-2020: A cross-sectional study

Rosanna May Maletta, Michael Daly, Laura Goodwin, Robert J. Noonan, I Gusti Ngurah Edi Putra and Eric Robinson
Psychiatry Research, Vol.322, 115094
04/2023
PMID: 36827857

Abstract

social inequalities personal discrimination discriminated group socioeconomic status multiple disadvantage Mental Health
Experiencing discrimination is associated with poorer mental health and demographic patterning of discrimination may explain inequalities in mental health. The present research examined prevalence of perceived discrimination in the UK and associations with inequalities in mental health. Data were taken from the UK Household Longitudinal Study (n = 32,003). Population subgroups (sex, age, ethnicity, health, religiousness, income, education, and occupation), perceived personal discrimination (personal experience) and perceived belonging to a discriminated group (identified as belonging to a group discriminated against in this country), and probable mental health problems (GHQ-12 assessed, cut off 4+) were reported on in 2019/2020. Nineteen percent of participants perceived personal discrimination in the last year, 9% perceived belonging to a discriminated group, and 22% had probable mental health problems. There were significant inequalities in both perceived discrimination and mental health. Being a younger adult, of mixed ethnicity, having health problems, having a university degree, and being unemployed increased risk of mental health problems and these associations were partially explained by perceived discrimination being more common among these groups. Perceived discrimination is common among UK adults, but prevalence differs by population subgroup. Perceived discrimination may contribute to social inequalities in mental health.
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Published (Version of record) Open Access Open CC BY V4.0  — This license enables reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator.

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