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Is temporary employment a cause or consequence of poor mental health? A panel data analysis

Is temporary employment a cause or consequence of poor mental health? A panel data analysis
Is temporary employment a cause or consequence of poor mental health? A panel data analysis
Mental health status has an association with labour market outcomes. If people in temporary employment have poorer mental health than those in permanent employment then it is consistent with two mutually inclusive possibilities: temporary employment generates adverse mental health effects and/or individuals with poorer mental health select into temporary from permanent employment. We apply regression analyses to longitudinal data corresponding to about 50,000 observations across 8000 individuals between 1991 and 2008 drawn from the British Household Panel Survey. We find that permanent employees who will be in temporary employment in the future have poorer mental health than those who never become temporarily employed. We also reveal that this relationship is mediated by greater job dissatisfaction. Overall, these results suggest that permanent workers with poor mental health appear to select into temporary employment thus signalling that prior cross section studies may overestimate the influence of employment type on mental health
0277-9536
50-58
Dawson, Chris
e4036a26-678c-4891-a1ea-9eb8813bca0b
Veliziotis, Michail
e43806b3-fdb5-494b-a624-04a5227d2fad
Pacheco, Gail
f99de1d1-2bb9-4805-a86a-74a5f52a92cf
Webber, Don J.
9c1dd512-f8f4-40dc-82a5-68057d6cf6ef
Dawson, Chris
e4036a26-678c-4891-a1ea-9eb8813bca0b
Veliziotis, Michail
e43806b3-fdb5-494b-a624-04a5227d2fad
Pacheco, Gail
f99de1d1-2bb9-4805-a86a-74a5f52a92cf
Webber, Don J.
9c1dd512-f8f4-40dc-82a5-68057d6cf6ef

Dawson, Chris, Veliziotis, Michail, Pacheco, Gail and Webber, Don J. (2015) Is temporary employment a cause or consequence of poor mental health? A panel data analysis. Social Science & Medicine, 134, 50-58. (doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.04.001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Mental health status has an association with labour market outcomes. If people in temporary employment have poorer mental health than those in permanent employment then it is consistent with two mutually inclusive possibilities: temporary employment generates adverse mental health effects and/or individuals with poorer mental health select into temporary from permanent employment. We apply regression analyses to longitudinal data corresponding to about 50,000 observations across 8000 individuals between 1991 and 2008 drawn from the British Household Panel Survey. We find that permanent employees who will be in temporary employment in the future have poorer mental health than those who never become temporarily employed. We also reveal that this relationship is mediated by greater job dissatisfaction. Overall, these results suggest that permanent workers with poor mental health appear to select into temporary employment thus signalling that prior cross section studies may overestimate the influence of employment type on mental health

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 2 April 2015
Published date: June 2015
Organisations: Southampton Business School

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 394261
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/394261
ISSN: 0277-9536
PURE UUID: 199dcbe9-8b58-41f9-a875-8e72d13119bd
ORCID for Michail Veliziotis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2245-587X

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Date deposited: 12 May 2016 11:28
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:53

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Contributors

Author: Chris Dawson
Author: Gail Pacheco
Author: Don J. Webber

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