4.6 Article

Social Drivers of Mental Health: A US Study Using Machine Learning

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
Volume 65, Issue 5, Pages 827-834

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2023.05.022

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This study employs machine learning to investigate the social drivers of mental health in different census tracts in the U.S. The results indicate that social drivers have a significant impact on mental health problems, and the effects vary based on factors such as poverty and racial segregation.
Introduction: Social drivers of mental health can be compared on an aggregated level. This study employed a machine learning approach to identify and rank social drivers of mental health across census tracts in the U.S. Methods: Data for 38,379 census tracts in the U.S. were collected from multiple sources in 2021. Two measures of mental health problems-self-reported depression and self-assessed poor mental health-among adults and three domains of social drivers (behavioral, environmental, and social) were analyzed on the basis of the unit of census tracts using the Extreme Gradient Boosting machine learning approach in 2022. The leading social drivers were found in each domain in the main sample and in the subsamples divided on the basis of poverty and racial segregation. Results: The three domains combined explained more than 90% of the variance of both mental illness indicators. Self-reported depression and self-assessed poor mental health differed in major social drivers. The two outcome indicators had one overlapping correlate from the behavioral domain: smoking. Other than smoking, climate zone and racial composition were the leading correlates from the environmental and social domains, respectively. Census tract characteristics moderated the impacts of social drivers on mental health problems; the major social drivers differed by census tract poverty and racial segregation. Conclusions: Population mental health is highly contextualized. Better interventions can be developed on the basis of census tract-level analyses of social drivers that characterize the upstream causes of mental health problems.Am J Prev Med 2023;65(5):827-834. (c) 2023 American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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