COVID-19 背景下的燃料贫困与心理健康

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 ECONOMICS
Dorothée Charlier, Bérangère Legendre
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引用次数: 0

摘要

燃料贫困是一个普遍存在的问题,影响着人们的健康,并造成严重的经济和社会影响。精神健康受到 COVID-19 大流行病的不利影响,而且似乎尤其受到燃料贫困的影响。我们分析了这种关系,同时强调了人口中个体脆弱性的不平等。我们首先建立了一个包含 4194 个法国成年人代表性观测数据的新型数据库。然后,我们使用一个条件混合过程模型,利用工具变量克服潜在的内生性,量化了燃料贫困对心理健康的因果效应。我们通过不同的敏感性测试证明了这种因果效应的稳健性。我们的结果表明,在满分 100 分的情况下,燃料贫困会使心理健康得分降低 6.3 分。燃料贫困还会使抑郁得分增加 5.35 分,焦虑得分增加 6.48 分,社会健康得分减少 6.82 分。我们的研究结果表明,解决能源贫困问题可以带来积极的溢出效应,从而改善心理健康。从长远来看,提供高能效住房的缓解政策也应成为应对气候和经济危害的优先事项,因为这些政策意味着健康方面的共同利益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fuel poverty and mental health in a COVID-19 context

Fuel poverty is a widespread problem which affects people's health and has serious economic and social repercussions. Mental health has been adversely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and appears to be particularly influenced by fuel poverty. We analyze this relationship while highlighting the unequal vulnerability of individuals in the population. We first built a novel database of 4194 representative observations of the French adult population. We then used a conditional mixed-process model to quantify the causal effect of fuel poverty on mental health using instrumental variables to overcome potential endogeneity. We prove the robustness of this causal effect by providing different sensitivity tests. Our results show that being fuel poor decreases the mental health score by 6.3 points out of 100. Fuel poverty also increases the depression score by 5.35 points, the anxiety score by 6.48 points, and decreases the social health score by 6.82 points. Our results show that tackling energy poverty can lead to positive spillover effects to improve mental health. Mitigation policies to provide energy-efficient housing should also become a priority to address climatic and economic hazards in the long term because they imply co-benefits in health.

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来源期刊
Economics & Human Biology
Economics & Human Biology 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
12.00%
发文量
85
审稿时长
61 days
期刊介绍: Economics and Human Biology is devoted to the exploration of the effect of socio-economic processes on human beings as biological organisms. Research covered in this (quarterly) interdisciplinary journal is not bound by temporal or geographic limitations.
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