Improving Women’s Mental Health during a Pandemic

Author:

Vlassopoulos Michael1,Siddique Abu2,Rahman Tabassum3,Pakrashi Debayan4,Islam Asad5,Ahmed Firoz6

Affiliation:

1. University of Southampton and IZA (email: )

2. Royal Holloway University of London (email: )

3. University of Melbourne (email: )

4. Indian Statistical Institute Kolkata and IIT Kanpur (email: )

5. Monash University and J-PAL (email: )

6. Technical University of Munich and Khulna University (email: )

Abstract

This paper evaluates a randomized, over-the-phone counseling intervention aimed at mitigating the mental health impact of COVID-19 on a sample of 2,402 women across 357 villages in Bangladesh. We find that the provision of two hours of mental support plus information on COVID-19 improves mental health ten months postintervention, leading to reductions of 20 percent in the prevalence of moderate and severe stress and 33 percent in depression. Our results suggest that this type of low-cost intervention ($14 per person) can be effective in providing rapid psychological support to vulnerable groups in times of crises. (JEL I12, I18, I31, J16, O12, O15)

Publisher

American Economic Association

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1. Improving Women’s Mental Health during a Pandemic;American Economic Journal: Applied Economics;2024-04-01

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