Disability-related inequalities in health and well-being are mediated by barriers to participation faced by people with disability. : A causal mediation analysis

Aitken, Zoe and Bishop, Glenda M. and Disney, George and Emerson, Eric and Kavanagh, Anne Marie (2022) Disability-related inequalities in health and well-being are mediated by barriers to participation faced by people with disability. : A causal mediation analysis. Social Science and Medicine, 315: 115500. ISSN 0277-9536

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Abstract

Large inequalities in health and well-being exist between people with and without disability, in part due to poor socio-economic circumstances, and potentially also related to societal factors including issues associated with accessibility and participation. To better understand the contribution of societal factors, we used a unique longitudinal survey of disability in Great Britain to quantify the extent to which barriers to participation contribute to poorer health and well-being. We used data from 2354 individuals who participated in three waves of the Life Opportunities Survey between 2009 and 2014 and compared five health and well-being outcomes (self-rated health, anxiousness, life satisfaction, life worth, happiness) between adults who acquired an impairment and those who remained disability-free. Causal mediation analysis was conducted to quantify how much of the effect of disability acquisition on each outcome was explained by barriers to participation in employment, economic life, transport, community, leisure and civic activities, social contact, and accessibility. People who recently acquired a disability had poorer health and well-being compared to people with no disability. Barriers to participation explained 15% of inequalities in self-rated health, 28% for anxiousness, 32% for life satisfaction, 37% for life worth, and 70% for happiness. A substantial proportion of the inequalities in health and well-being experienced by people with recently acquired disability were socially produced, driven by barriers to participation in different life domains. Furthermore, there was evidence that barriers to participation mediated the effect of well-being measured to a greater extent than the more clinically aligned measures, self-reported health and anxiousness. These findings highlight modifiable factors amenable to public health interventions that could lead to substantial improvements in health and well-being for people with disability.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Social Science and Medicine
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/3300/3306
Subjects:
?? disabilityhealth inequalitieswell-beingbarriers to participationcausal mediation analysiscausal inferencegreat britainhealth(social science) ??
ID Code:
178936
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
11 Nov 2022 16:20
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
24 Sep 2024 12:01