• Preventive medicine · Feb 2024

    Establishing spirituality as an intermediary determinant of health among 42,843 children from eight countries.

    • Valerie Michaelson, Nathan King, Kastytis Šmigelskas, Agnė Slapšinskaitė Dackevičienė, Marta Malinowska-Cieślik, Karen Patte, Pauli Gardner, Jo Inchley, William Pickett, and HBSC Spiritual Health Writing Group.
    • Department of Health Sciences, Brock University, 1812 Sir Isaac Brock Way, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address: vmichaelson@brocku.ca.
    • Prev Med. 2024 Feb 1; 179: 107846107846.

    AbstractThe World Health Organization (WHO) Commission on the Social Determinants of Health (CSDH) conceptual framework identifies socio-economic position as a structural determinant of health. Recognized intermediary determinants include biological, behavioural, and psychosocial factors. We examined whether connections afforded by a healthy spirituality potentially act as unrecognized intermediary determinants in adolescent populations, contributing to inequities in mental health. Reports from 42,843 children (21,007 boys, 21,836 girls) from eight countries who participated in the 2017-2018 Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study were used to describe correlations between family affluence and positive levels of mental health, using a cross-sectional design. Based on the CSDH conceptual framework and multivariable regression analyses, we then examined whether these associations were mediated by spiritual health. Connections afforded by a high level of spiritual health were universally correlated with positive mental health status. In three Western European nations (England, Scotland, and Wales) and Canada affluence was correlated with better mental health and this was partially mediated by spiritual health. Among the four Eastern European countries (Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland), our findings did not support aspects of the CSDH framework that focus on affluence as a direct determinant of health. Spiritual health potentially is an intermediary determinant of children's health in some Western countries, but not in Eastern countries. The universality of social determinants of health models and the measures used in their evaluation require careful assessment across cultures, political contexts, and health outcomes.Crown Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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