Trajectories of the socioeconomic gradient of mental health: Results from the CLSA COVID-19 Questionnaire Study

•In April-December 2020, the prevalence of anxiety remained unchanged.•The prevalence of self-reported feeling generally unwell decreased.•Relative and absolute income-related inequalities in anxiety and feeling unwell were unchanged.•The early pandemic in Canada neither equalized nor exacerbated in...

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Published inHealth policy (Amsterdam) Vol. 131; p. 104758
Main Authors Asada, Yukiko, Grignon, Michel, Hurley, Jeremiah, Stewart, Samuel A., Smith, Nathan K., Kirkland, Susan, McMillan, Jacqueline, Griffith, Lauren E., Wolfson, Christina, Raina, Parminder
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ireland Elsevier B.V 01.05.2023
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Summary:•In April-December 2020, the prevalence of anxiety remained unchanged.•The prevalence of self-reported feeling generally unwell decreased.•Relative and absolute income-related inequalities in anxiety and feeling unwell were unchanged.•The early pandemic in Canada neither equalized nor exacerbated inequality. As the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic prolongs, documenting trajectories of the socioeconomic gradient of mental health is important. We describe changes in the prevalence and absolute and relative income-related inequalities of mental health between April and December 2020 in Canada. We used data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA) COVID-19 Questionnaire Study and the pre-pandemic CLSA Follow-up 1. We estimated the prevalence proportion, the concentration index (relative inequality), and the generalized concentration index (absolute inequality) for anxiety and self-reported feeling generally unwell at multiple points in April-December 2020, overall, by sex and age group, by region, and among those who reported poor or fair overall health and mental health pre-pandemic. Overall, the prevalence of anxiety remained unchanged (22.45 to 22.10%, p = 0.231), but self-reported feeling generally unwell decreased (9.83 to 5.94%, p = 0.004). Relative and absolute income-related inequalities were unchanged for both anxiety and self-reported feeling generally unwell, with exceptions of an increased concentration of self-reported feeling generally unwell among the poor, measured by the concentration index, overall (-0.054 to -0.115, p = 0.004) and in Ontario (-0.035 to -0.123, p = 0.047) and British Columbia (-0.055 to -0.141, p = 0.044). The COVID-19 pandemic appeared to neither exacerbate nor ameliorate existing income-related inequalities in mental health among older adults in Canada between April and December 2020. Continued monitoring of inequalities is necessary.
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ISSN:0168-8510
1872-6054
1872-6054
DOI:10.1016/j.healthpol.2023.104758