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Country-Level Meritocratic Beliefs Moderate the Social Gradient in Adolescent Mental Health: A Multilevel Study in 30 European Countries

[journal article]

Weinberg, Dominic
Stevens, Gonneke W. J. M.
Currie, Candace
Delaruelle, Katrijn
Dierckens, Maxim
Lenzi, Michela
Main, Gill
Finkenauer, Catrin

Abstract

Purpose: Adolescents with higher socioeconomic status (SES) report better mental health. The strength of the association - the "social gradient in adolescent mental health" - varies across countries, with stronger associations in countries with greater income inequality. Country-level meritocratic b... view more

Purpose: Adolescents with higher socioeconomic status (SES) report better mental health. The strength of the association - the "social gradient in adolescent mental health" - varies across countries, with stronger associations in countries with greater income inequality. Country-level meritocratic beliefs (beliefs that people get what they deserve) may also strengthen the social gradient in adolescent mental health; higher SES may be more strongly linked to adolescent's perceptions of capability and respectful treatment. Methods: Using data from 11-15 year olds across 30 European countries participating in the 2013/2014 Health Behaviour in School-aged Children study (n = 131,101), multilevel regression models with cross-level interactions examined whether country-level meritocratic beliefs moderated the association between two individual-level indicators of SES, family affluence and perceived family wealth, and three indicators of adolescent mental health (life satisfaction, psychosomatic complaints, and aggressive behavior). Results: For family affluence, in some countries, there was a social gradient in adolescent mental health, but in others the social gradient was absent or reversed. For perceived family wealth, there was a social gradient in adolescent life satisfaction and psychosomatic complaints in all countries. Country-level meritocratic beliefs moderated associations between SES and both life satisfaction and psychosomatic complaints: in countries with stronger meritocratic beliefs associations with family affluence strengthened, while associations with perceived family wealth weakened. Conclusions: Country-level meritocratic beliefs moderate the associations between SES and adolescent mental health, with contrasting results for two different SES measures. Further understanding of the mechanisms connecting meritocratic beliefs, SES, and adolescent mental health is warranted.... view less

Keywords
adolescent; mental health; socioeconomic factors; adolescence; inequality; health status; Europe; international comparison; meritocracy

Classification
Sociology of the Youth, Sociology of Childhood
Developmental Psychology

Free Keywords
Eurobarometer 88.4 (2017) (ZA6939 v2.0.0)

Document language
English

Publication Year
2021

Page/Pages
p. 548-557

Journal
Journal of Adolescent Health, 58 (2021) 3

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2020.06.031

ISSN
1879-1972

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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