Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
about
Attitudes towards those bereaved by a suicide: a population-based, cross-sectional study in rural Japan.Violence and post-traumatic stress disorder in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: the protocol for an epidemiological and genetic surveyThe effects of mid-life socioeconomic disadvantage and perceived social support on trajectories of subsequent depressive symptoms among older Taiwanese women.Exploring recruitment, willingness to participate, and retention of low-SES women in stress and depression prevention.Social Epidemiology and Global Mental Health: Expanding the Evidence from High-Income to Low- and Middle-Income Countries.Determinants of common mental disorders detection by general practitioners in primary health care in Brazil.The relationship between postnatal depression, sociodemographic factors, levels of partner support, and levels of physical activity.Cognitive ability, parental socioeconomic position and internalising and externalising problems in adolescence: findings from two European cohort studies.The association of marital relationship and perceived social support with mental health of women in Pakistan.Socioeconomic predictors and consequences of depression among primary care attenders with non-communicable diseases in the Western Cape, South Africa: cohort study within a randomised trial.Socio-economic position and mental disorders in a working-age Finnish population: the health 2000 study.The health of young Swedish Sami with special reference to mental health.Wealth Inequality and Mental Disability Among the Chinese Population: A Population Based Study.PREVALENCE of psychiatric morbidity in a community sample in Western Kenya.Childhood cognitive ability and adult mental health in the British 1946 birth cohort.Do self-perceptions of emotional intelligence predict health-related quality of life? A case study in hospital managers in GreeceMental illness and lost income among adult South AfricansA theoretical and empirical framework for constructing culture-specific stigma instruments for Chile.Poverty and common mental disorders in low and middle income countries: A systematic review.Are Level of Education and Employment Related to Symptoms of Common Mental Disorders in Current and Retired Professional Footballers?Housing conditions and mental health of orphans in South AfricaThe measurement of poverty in psychiatric epidemiology in LMICs: critical review and recommendations.Analysis of an Egyptian study on the socioeconomic distribution of depressive symptoms among undergraduates.Meeting the millennium development goals in Sub-saharan Africa: what about mental health?Defining subgroups of low socioeconomic status women at risk for depressive symptoms: the importance of perceived stress and cumulative risks.The association between neighbourhood-level deprivation and depression: evidence from the south african national income dynamics study.Attitudes of health professionals towards the stigma surrounding depression in times of economic crisis.Socioeconomic status indicators and common mental disorders: Evidence from a study of prenatal depression in Pakistan.Depression among female heads-of-household in rural Mozambique: A cross-sectional population-based survey.Mental health literacy as a mediator in use of mental health services among older korean adults.Mental Health and Its Associated Variables Among International Students at a Japanese University: With Special Reference to Their Financial Status.International migration of partner, autonomy and depressive symptoms among women from a mexican rural area.Relative Contributions of Different Lifestyle Factors to Health-Related Quality of Life in the Elderly.Impact evaluations of mental health programmes: the missing piece in global mental health.Factors influencing report of common mental health problems among psychologically distressed adults.Common mental disorders in Petrópolis-RJ: a challenge to integrate mental health into primary care strategies.[Socioeconomic inequality and mental health: a Latin American literature review].Challenges facing South Africa's mental health care system: stakeholders' perceptions of causes and potential solutionsGlobal Trade and Mental HealthNeurocognitive and mental health outcomes and association with quality of life among adults living with HIV: a cross-sectional focus on a low-literacy population from coastal Kenya
P2860
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P2860
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
description
2003 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2003 թուականի Յուլիսին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
2003 թվականի հուլիսին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
@hy
2003年の論文
@ja
2003年論文
@yue
2003年論文
@zh-hant
2003年論文
@zh-hk
2003年論文
@zh-mo
2003年論文
@zh-tw
2003年论文
@wuu
name
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@ast
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@en
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@nl
type
label
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@ast
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@en
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@nl
prefLabel
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@ast
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@en
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@nl
P2860
P3181
P356
P1476
Education and income: which is more important for mental health?
@en
P2093
P2860
P3181
P356
10.1136/JECH.57.7.501
P407
P577
2003-07-01T00:00:00Z