The Kids are not alright - When did we start getting more more distressed?
N. Glozier, R. Morris, F. Botha, P. Butterworth

TL;DR
Mental health has been declining over time, with younger generations like Millennials showing worse outcomes compared to older generations.
Contribution
This study identifies a birth cohort effect in declining mental health, particularly for Millennials, using longitudinal data and nonlinear modeling.
Findings
Millennials had lower mental health scores at the same age as earlier generations.
Later cohorts showed less improvement in mental health as they aged compared to earlier ones.
Younger age groups consistently had worse mental health in more recent surveys.
Abstract
Much has been made of the decline in population mental health over COVID but most studies show this just exacerabted a loing term trend This has predominnatly been attributed to changes in adolescent mental health over the past decade but there ahs been little evalaution of whether this post Millenium cohort was the first to demonstrate such a decline This study investigates to what extent mental differs in people born in different decades – i.e., possible birth cohort differences in the mental health of the popualtion over the past two decades To remove the linear dependency and identify any differences in trends between cohorts, we model mental health for each cohort as a nonlinear smooth function of age in an age-cohort model. This analysis draws on 20 annual waves of the Household Income and Labour Dynamic in Australia (HILDA) survey.,is a nationally representative household panel…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Legal Issues in Pediatric Healthcare · Childhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life · Family Support in Illness
