The High Price of Debt: Household financial debt and its impact on mental and physical health

Citation

Sweet, Elizabeth; Nandi, Arijit; Adam, Emma; & McDade, Thomas (2013). The High Price of Debt: Household financial debt and its impact on mental and physical health. Social Science & Medicine. vol. 91 pp. 94-100 , PMCID: PMC3718010

Abstract

Household financial debt in America has risen dramatically in recent years. While there is evidence that debt is associated with adverse psychological health, its relationship with other health outcomes is relatively unknown. We investigate the associations of multiple indices of financial debt with psychological and general health outcomes among 8400 young adult respondents from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health). Our findings show that reporting high financial debt relative to available assets is associated with higher perceived stress and depression, worse self-reported general health, and higher diastolic blood pressure. These associations remain significant when controlling for prior socioeconomic status, psychological and physical health, and other demographic factors. The results suggest that debt is an important socioeconomic determinant of health that should be explored further in social epidemiology research.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.05.009

Keyword(s)

Financial debt

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Social Science & Medicine

Author(s)

Sweet, Elizabeth
Nandi, Arijit
Adam, Emma
McDade, Thomas

Year Published

2013

Volume Number

91

Pages

94-100

DOI

10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.05.009

PMCID

PMC3718010

NIHMSID

NIHMS482461

Reference ID

4505