Background: Social disadvantage consistently predicts both self-reported distress and clinically diagnosed disorders such as depression. Yet, many individuals who are exposed to disadvantage do not report high levels of distress. This study extends our recent work showing that high cognitive ability may protect against the negative health consequences of exposure to disadvantaged backgrounds. We test whether this ‘buffer effect’ exists across clinically relevant indices of mental health in a population-representative sample. Methods: In total, 27 985 participants were drawn from the UK Household Longitudinal Study (Understanding Society). Clinical diagnoses of depression and clinically relevant measures of psychological distress [i.e. ...
Social group identification and socioeconomic deprivation have both been linked to self-reported dep...
An abundance of research has implicated socioeconomic disadvantage as a major risk factor for increa...
Early life adversity is associated with differences in cognition and mental health that can impact o...
Background: Social disadvantage consistently predicts both self-reported distress and clinically-dia...
Background: Social disadvantage consistently predicts both self-reported distress and clinically di...
Objective: Individual differences in childhood cognitive ability have been neglected in the study of...
Objective: Individual differences in childhood cognitive ability have been neglected in the study of...
This study examined whether associations between cognitive ability and mental health (depression, an...
Background: This paper presents a new psychological model of why low income increases risk of mental...
Stress has been shown to have a causal effect on risk for depression. We investigated the role of co...
Purpose: Existing evidence on the mental health consequences of disadvantaged areas uses cross-secti...
Individuals in lower socioeconomic classes are said to have higher stress levels than those in highe...
Social group identification and socioeconomic deprivation have both been linked to self-reported dep...
An abundance of research has implicated socioeconomic disadvantage as a major risk factor for increa...
Early life adversity is associated with differences in cognition and mental health that can impact o...
Background: Social disadvantage consistently predicts both self-reported distress and clinically-dia...
Background: Social disadvantage consistently predicts both self-reported distress and clinically di...
Objective: Individual differences in childhood cognitive ability have been neglected in the study of...
Objective: Individual differences in childhood cognitive ability have been neglected in the study of...
This study examined whether associations between cognitive ability and mental health (depression, an...
Background: This paper presents a new psychological model of why low income increases risk of mental...
Stress has been shown to have a causal effect on risk for depression. We investigated the role of co...
Purpose: Existing evidence on the mental health consequences of disadvantaged areas uses cross-secti...
Individuals in lower socioeconomic classes are said to have higher stress levels than those in highe...
Social group identification and socioeconomic deprivation have both been linked to self-reported dep...
An abundance of research has implicated socioeconomic disadvantage as a major risk factor for increa...
Early life adversity is associated with differences in cognition and mental health that can impact o...