Understanding the relationship between crime victimisation and mental health: A longitudinal analysis of population data
Survey
HILDA
Author(s)
Date Issued
2014-05
Publisher
NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research
Pages
17
Keywords
Violent Crime
Mental Health
Longitudinal Study
Victimisation
Gender
Property Crime
Abstract
Aim
To determine whether a change in crime victimisation status (from non-victim to victim) affects mental health.
Method
Fixed effects models were used to examine the effect of physical violence and property crime victimisation in the past year on future mental health. The sample pooled 110,671 records from 16,187 persons aged 15 years or older who participated in at least two waves of the Australian Household, Income and Labour Dynamics (HILDA) survey between 2002 and 2011. The analysis controlled for all time-stable factors as well as a wide range of dynamic variables known to be associated with mental health (i.e., general health, partner status, area of residence, labour force status, financial prosperity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, physical activity, social networks and number of life events).
Results
The analysis revealed that becoming a victim of violent crime results in a decrease in mental health. Females had a more pronounced decline in mental health after becoming a victim of violence compared with males. By contrast, there was no evidence that becoming a victim of property crime has a detectable impact on mental health for females or males.
Conclusion
Being a victim of violent crime has an adverse effect on mental health. This effect is apparent for both male and female victims, however there is a greater effect of violent crime on women’s mental health.
To determine whether a change in crime victimisation status (from non-victim to victim) affects mental health.
Method
Fixed effects models were used to examine the effect of physical violence and property crime victimisation in the past year on future mental health. The sample pooled 110,671 records from 16,187 persons aged 15 years or older who participated in at least two waves of the Australian Household, Income and Labour Dynamics (HILDA) survey between 2002 and 2011. The analysis controlled for all time-stable factors as well as a wide range of dynamic variables known to be associated with mental health (i.e., general health, partner status, area of residence, labour force status, financial prosperity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, physical activity, social networks and number of life events).
Results
The analysis revealed that becoming a victim of violent crime results in a decrease in mental health. Females had a more pronounced decline in mental health after becoming a victim of violence compared with males. By contrast, there was no evidence that becoming a victim of property crime has a detectable impact on mental health for females or males.
Conclusion
Being a victim of violent crime has an adverse effect on mental health. This effect is apparent for both male and female victims, however there is a greater effect of violent crime on women’s mental health.
External resource (Link)
ISBN
ISBN 978-1-921824-81-4 ISSN 130-1046
Subject Keywords
DSS Main category
Type
Reports and technical papers
