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- 2018
Do you let me symptomatize? The potential role of cultural values in crossKeywords: Mental disorder prevalence,WMH,cultural values,depression,immigration rate Abstract: Mental disorders may show inherent cross-national variability in their prevalence. A considerable number of meta-analyses attribute this heterogeneity to the methodological diversity in published epidemiological studies. Cultural values are characteristically not assessed in meta-regression models as potential covariates. Our aim was to conduct a meta-regression analysis to explore to what extent certain cultural values and immigration rates (as indicator of cultural diversity) might be associated with the cross-national heterogeneity of prevalence rates. To minimize methodological differences that may exert a confounding effect, prevalence rates were obtained from the World Health Organization’s (WHO) World Mental Health Survey Initiative. Cultural indices (overall emancipative values; overall secular values) were collected from the World Value Survey, while immigration rates were registered by utilizing the data of the United Nations’ World Population Policies 2005 report. Meta-regression analysis indicated that overall emancipative values (i.e. promoting self-expression, non-violent protest) showed significant connection with lifetime and last year prevalence of any mood disorders (Z?=?4.71, p?=?.001; Z?=?2.35, p?=?.02) and any internalizing disorders (a merged category that combined mood and anxiety disorders; Z?=?2.82, p?=?.004; Z?=?2.34, p?=?.02). Overall secular values (i.e. rejecting authority and obedience) were negatively associated with last year prevalence of depression (Z?=??2.75, p?=?.06). Multistep regression analysis indicated that immigration rate moderated the connection between cultural values and mental disorders. Countries with higher immigration rates showed higher emancipative and secular values. Our findings might function as potential foundation for formulating hypotheses regarding the cultural context’s influence on the population’s mental health
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