Social Class and Mental Health

Author:

Muntaner Carles1,Ng Edwin1,Prins Seth J.1,Bones-Rocha Katia1,Espelt Albert1,Chung Haejoo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Health Sciences, Graduate School, and School of Health Policy & Management, College of Health Science, Korea University, Suite 365, Hana Science Building, 145 Anam-Ro, Seongbuk-Gu, Seoul, 136-713, Republic of Korea

Abstract

This study tests whether social class exploitation operates as a relational mechanism that generates mental health inequalities in the nursing home industry. We ask, does social class exploitation (i.e., the acquisition of economic benefits from the labor of those who are dominated) have a systematic and predictable impact on depression among nursing assistants? Using cross-sectional data from 868 nursing assistants employed in 50 nursing homes in three U.S. states, we measure social class exploitation as “ownership type” (private for-profit, private not-for-profit, and public) and “managerial domination” (labor relations violations, perceptions of labor-management conflict). Depression is assessed using the original and revised versions of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D and CESD-R). Using two-level logistic regressions, we find that private for-profit ownership and higher managerial domination are predictive of depression among nursing assistants even after adjustment for potential confounders and mediators. Our findings confirm the theoretical and empirical value of applying a social class approach to understanding how mental health inequalities are generated through exploitative mechanisms. Ownership type and managerial domination appear to affect depression through social relations that generate mental health inequalities through the process of acquiring profits, controlling production, supervising and monitoring labor, and enforcing disciplinary sanctions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

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