Arbeitspapier
Mental Illness and Unhappiness
This paper is a contribution to the second World Happiness Report. It makes five main points. 1. Mental health is the biggest single predictor of life-satisfaction. This is so in the UK, Germany and Australia even if mental health is included with a six-year lag. It explains more of the variance of life-satisfaction in the population of a country than physical health does, and much more than unemployment and income do. Income explains 1% of the variance of life-satisfaction or less. 2. Much the most common forms of mental illness are depression and anxiety disorders. Rigorously defined, these affect about 10% of all the worlds population and prevalence is similar in rich and poor countries. 3. Depression and anxiety are more common during working age than in later life. They account for a high proportion of disability and impose major economic costs and financial losses to governments worldwide. 4. Yet even in rich countries, under a third of people with diagnosable mental illness are in treatment. 5. Cost-effective treatments exist, with recovery rates of 50% or more. In rich countries treatment is likely to have no net cost to the Exchequer due to savings on welfare benefits and lost taxes. But even in poor countries a reasonable level of coverage could be obtained at a cost of under $2 per head of population per year.
- Sprache
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Englisch
- Erschienen in
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Series: IZA Discussion Papers ; No. 7620
- Klassifikation
-
Wirtschaft
Health: General
Health and Inequality
Health: Government Policy; Regulation; Public Health
- Thema
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mental illness
welfare benefits
healthcare costs
life-satisfaction
- Ereignis
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Geistige Schöpfung
- (wer)
-
Layard, Richard
Chisholm, Dan
Patel, Vikram
Saxena, Shekhar
- Ereignis
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Veröffentlichung
- (wer)
-
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA)
- (wo)
-
Bonn
- (wann)
-
2013
- Handle
- Letzte Aktualisierung
-
10.03.2025, 11:45 MEZ
Datenpartner
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Objekttyp
- Arbeitspapier
Beteiligte
- Layard, Richard
- Chisholm, Dan
- Patel, Vikram
- Saxena, Shekhar
- Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA)
Entstanden
- 2013