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Economic precarity and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: findings from the census household pulse survey (2020–2021)

Title
Economic precarity and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: findings from the census household pulse survey (2020–2021)
Authors
Kim C.E.Kim H.H.-S.
Ewha Authors
김현수
SCOPUS Author ID
김현수scopus
Issue Date
2022
Journal Title
Sociological Spectrum
ISSN
0273-2173JCR Link
Citation
Sociological Spectrum vol. 42, no. 3, pp. 195 - 216
Publisher
Routledge
Indexed
SSCI; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The coronavirus pandemic has had devastating mental health consequences across the world. Among others, economic uncertainty created by job loss due to the pandemic has been a main culprit. This study examines the deleterious effect of losing a job personally or living with a family member who did on mental health among American adults. We also examine whether this link varies across two measures of vulnerability at the individual level (low household income and ethnic minority status). We further run cross-level interaction models between job loss and two contextual moderators (COVID-19 cases and community social capital). Based on multilevel analysis of Census House Pulse Survey consisting of U.S. probability samples collected over a 10-month period between April 2020 and February 2021, we find strong support for the positive relationship between job loss and mental distress, which is more pronounced among Americans with lower household income. This relationship also increases in regions with higher average coronavirus infections but decreases in places with higher stock of social capital. © 2022 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
DOI
10.1080/02732173.2022.2081891
Appears in Collections:
사회과학대학 > 사회학전공 > Journal papers
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