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Relating mental health, health-related quality of life and well-being in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic: a cross-sectional comparison in 14 European countries in early 2023
Journal Contribution - Journal Article
Subtitle:a cross-sectional comparison in 14 European countries in early 2023
Abstract:Objectives: To understand country-level differences in the population's health and well-being in Europe in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, while also investigating the internal relationships among health and wellbeing outcomes. Study design: Cross-sectional study. Methods: We collected representative panel-based samples of 1000 adult respondents per country across 14 Western European countries in early 2023. The survey used standardised instruments to assess health and wellbeing, including EQ-5D-5L, GHQ-12, PHQ-9, general satisfaction, the Brief Resilience Scale and the ULS-6 (Loneliness) Scale. Summary statistics of the aggregate scores for each country were calculated and ranked. Multidimensional unfolding was used to visualize the rank relationships across countries and the indices, whereby a closer distance between a country and an index indicated a higher/better rank. Additionally, two key objective country-level indices (GDP growth rate and excess mortality rates) were integrated into the analysis. Results: Austria was found to report better status on most of the indices, while Sweden and the UK ranked consistently worse than the other countries. The loneliness, EQ-VAS and satisfaction scores were plotted further from the mental well-being scores and EQ-5D utility scores. Countries that did well in controlling excess mortality and maintaining economic growth tended to exhibit lower performance in self-reported well-being. Conclusion: This study presents the variability in health and well-being across 14 West-European countries. Discrepancies between countries in self-reported outcomes reveal the complex interrelationship among different aspects of well-being. The study also highlights the complexities and challenges in optimising policies to maximize the overall well-being of society.
Published in: Public health
ISSN: 0033-3506
Volume: 238
Pages: 16 - 22
Publication year:2025
Keywords:Human medicine, Paramedicine
Accessibility:Open