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Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick
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Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Mental Health and Biomarkers

Andrew OswaldIZA and Warwick

Page 2: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Now let’s broaden the idea of human well-being (beyond ‘happiness’).

Page 3: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

We’ll discuss biomarkers

Page 4: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

We’ll discuss biomarkers

Heart rate

Systolic blood pressure

Diastolic blood pressure

C-reactive protein

Fibrinogen

Page 5: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

But let’s start with mental health.

Page 6: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

I will say almost nothing about really serious mental illness.

Page 7: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

I will say almost nothing about really serious mental illness.

Psychosis occurs in about 1% of the population.

Page 8: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Instead we can think of mental ill-health (depression, anxiety, and mental strain).

Page 9: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Happiness and life-satisfaction equations typically have similar structures to mental-health equations.

Page 10: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

A psychological-ill-health measure used a lot in the psychiatry literature is a GHQ score (which stands for General Health Questionnaire).

Page 11: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Typical GHQ mental-strain questions

Have you:

Lost much sleep over worry?

Page 12: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Typical GHQ mental-strain questions

Have you:

Lost much sleep over worry?Felt constantly under strain?

Page 13: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Typical GHQ mental-strain questions

Have you:

Lost much sleep over worry?Felt constantly under strain?Felt you could not overcome your difficulties?

Page 14: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Typical GHQ mental-strain questions

Have you:

Lost much sleep over worry?Felt constantly under strain?Felt you could not overcome your difficulties?Been feeling unhappy and depressed?

Page 15: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

It was developed as a way to judge who needs psychiatric treatment.

Page 16: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

The exact 12 questions that make up a GHQ score

“Have you lost much sleep over worry?”; “Been able to concentrate on things?”; “Felt you are playing a useful part in things?”; “Felt capable of making decisions about things?”; “Felt constantly under strain?”; “Felt you could not overcome your difficulties?”;

Page 17: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

“Been able to enjoy your normal day-to-day activities”; “Been able to face up to your problems”; “Been feeling unhappy and depressed?”; “Been losing confidence in yourself?”; “Been thinking of yourself as a worthless person?”; “Been feeling reasonably happy all things considered?”.

Page 18: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Each of the 12 questions is scored out of 3.

Page 19: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

On a 36-point scale

Mean of GHQ 10.4975

Standard deviation 4.89

Page 20: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.
Page 21: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

You will remember:

Page 22: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

The pattern of a typical person’s happiness through life

4.9

5.0

5.1

5.2

5.3

5.4

5.5

5.6

15-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 51-60 61-70Age group

Ave

rag

e li

fe s

atis

fact

ion

sco

re

Page 23: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

This holds in various settings

Page 24: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

This holds in various settings

For example, we see the same age pattern in mental health among a recent sample of 800,000 UK citizens:

[Blanchflower and Oswald, Social Science & Medicine, 2008]

Page 25: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

The probability of depression by ageMales, LFS data set 2004-2006

-0.01

-0.005

0

0.005

0.01

0.015

0.02

1938 1942 1946 1950 1954 1958 1962 1966 1970 1974 1978 1982 1986 1990

Year of birth

Reg

ress

ion

co

effi

cien

t

Page 26: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

-0.014

-0.012

-0.01

-0.008

-0.006

-0.004

-0.002

0

0.002

1942 1946 1950 1954 1958 1962 1966 1970 1974 1978 1982 1986 1990

Depression by age among females: LFS data 2004-2006Q2

Year of birth

Reg

ress

ion

co

effi

cien

t

Page 27: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

An important border is between happiness and medicine

Page 28: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

An important border is between happiness and medicine

• Is it possible that we could find physiological correlates with human well-being?

• Perhaps to broaden the standard policy goal of GDP?

Page 29: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

We are studying mental well-being and physiological data on a random sample of 100,000 English citizens.

Page 30: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

We are interested in equations for

Page 31: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

We are interested in equations for

Heart rate

Systolic blood pressure

Diastolic blood pressure

C-reactive protein

Fibrinogen

Page 32: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Blood pressure = cardiac output X peripheral resistance.

Page 33: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Systolic pressure is the force of blood in the arteries as the heart beats. It is shown as the top number in a blood pressure reading. High blood pressure is 140 and higher for systolic pressure.

Page 34: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Diastolic pressure is the force of blood in the arteries as the heart relaxes between beats. It's shown as the bottom number in a blood pressure reading.

Page 35: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

C-reactive protein (CRP) is a protein found in the blood, the levels of which rise in response to inflammation (i.e. C-reactive protein is an acute-phase protein). It is synthesized in the liver.

Page 36: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Fibrinogen is a protein that plays a key role in blood clotting. Fibrinogen is a sticky, fibrous coagulant in the blood that increases the risk of experiencing one of the leading causes of death and disability - stroke.

Page 37: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Why would we care?

Page 38: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

It is known that heart rate rises under stress.

Page 54: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

What happened?

• Average heart-rate rose 11 beats a minute

• On average, players used up 140 calories playing the game

• Overall, the physiological changes were “similar…those … in moderate physical exercise”.

Page 56: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Good time for points or questions?

Page 57: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Or maybe in the long run in western society we can blend well-being survey responses with biomarker data.

Page 58: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

For example

Cortisol is produced by the adrenal gland in the zona fasciculata, the second of three layers comprising the outer adrenal cortex. This release is controlled by the hypothalamus, a part of the brain.

Page 59: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Main functions of cortisol in the body

• increasing blood sugar through glycogenolysis and reduction of glucose uptake into cells.

• suppressing the immune system

• aiding in fat, protein, and carbohydrate metabolism

Page 60: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

The amount of cortisol present in the blood undergoes diurnal variation; the level peaks in the early morning (approximately 8 am) and reaches its lowest level at about midnight-4 am, or three to five hours after the onset of sleep.

Page 61: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Important work by Andrew Steptoe of UCL:

Whitehall II data

Page 62: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Salivary cortisol (Steptoe data)

5

6

7

8

9

10

1 Low 2 3 4 5 High

Happiness quintiles

nm

ol/

l

8 samples (08:00 – 22:30)Adjusted for gender, age, occupational grade, smoking, bmi, and GHQ

P = .009

Page 63: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Heart rate

64

68

72

76

80

1 Low 2 3 4 5 High

Happiness quintiles

bp

m

Men Women

Adjusted for age, occupational grade, concurrent physical activity, smoking, bmi, and GHQ score

P = .017 in men

Steptoe et al, 2005PNAS

Page 65: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Pulse: Average heart rate is about 72 beats per minute.

Page 66: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Interesting patterns emerge

• First, there are well-determined income gradients in (and only in) heart-rate and C-reactive protein equations.

Page 68: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

• Third, education has little effect within biomarker equations.

Page 70: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

• Fifth, biomarker variables work powerfully in well-being equations.

Page 71: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

To clinicians

High blood pressure is potentially a sign of mental strain and low well-being

Page 73: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Across nations, hypertension and happiness are inversely correlated

(Blanchflower and Oswald, 2008 Journal of Health Economics)

0

10

20

30

40

50

Figure 2.The Inverse Correlation Between Hypertension and Life

Satisfaction: 16 European Nations Aggregated into Quartiles

Countries in the Countries in the lowest quartile highest quartile of blood-pressure of blood-pressure

IrelandDenmarkN'LandsSweden

SpainFranceLuxUK Austria

ItalyBelgiumGreece

E. GermanyW. GermanyPortugalFinland

P

erce

nta

ge o

f citi

zens

ver

y sa

tisfie

d w

ith t

heir

live

s

Per

cent

age

of c

itiz

ens

very

sat

isfi

ed w

ith

thei

r li

ves

Page 74: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Happiness and mental well-being are of interest in themselves.

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“Every subject received a standard 4mm-punch biopsy, and the healing progress was monitored via high-resolution ultrasound scanning.”

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“Every subject received a standard 4mm-punch biopsy, and the healing progress was monitored via high-resolution ultrasound scanning.”

Page 79: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Ebrecht et al 2004

• The overall results showed a significant negative correlation between speed of wound healing and GHQ scores (r = -.59; p < .01)

Page 80: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

In other words, happier human beings heal more quickly.

Page 81: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

A more recent paper

Page 82: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

A more recent paper

“Enhanced wound healing after emotional disclosure intervention”

Weinman, Ebrecht et al

BRITISH JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY    Volume: 13    Pages: 95-102    Part: Part 1    Published: FEB 2008

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• Participants who wrote about traumatic events had significantly smaller wounds 14 and 21 days after the biopsy compared with those who wrote about time management.

Page 84: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Also

There is some evidence that happiness seems to make you live longer.

Page 85: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

The ‘Nuns Study’

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2001

Page 86: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

“Positive emotions in early life and longevity: Findings from the nun study.” By Danner, Deborah D.; Snowdon, David A.; Friesen, Wallace V.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol 80(5), May 2001, 804-813.

Page 87: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

• Handwritten autobiographies from 180 Catholic nuns, composed when participants were a mean age of 22 years, were scored for emotional content and related to survival during ages 75 to 95.

Page 88: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

One of the nuns wrote:

“God started my life off well by bestowing upon me grace of inestimable value… The past year which I spent as a candidate studying at Notre Dame has been a very happy one. Now I look forward with eager joy to receiving the Holy Habit of Our Lady and to a life of union with Love Divine”

Page 89: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Whilst another nun wrote:

“I was born on September 26, 1909, the eldest of seven children, five girls and two boys… My candidate year was spent in the motherhouse, teaching chemistry and second year Latin at Notre Dame Institute. With God’s grace, I intend to do my best for our Order, for the spread of religion and for my personal sanctification.”

Page 90: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

• After joining the order their lives were almost exactly the same - same food, same work, same routine

• But not the same life expectancy…

• Among the less-positive nuns, 65% died before their 85th birthday. Among the happy nuns, 90% were still alive.

Page 91: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

• A strong inverse association was found between positive emotional content in these writings and risk of mortality in late life (p < .001).

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• As the quartile ranking of positive emotion in early life increased, there was a stepwise decrease in risk of mortality resulting in a 2.5-fold difference between the lowest and highest quartiles.

Page 93: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

• Positive emotional content in early-life autobiographies was strongly associated with longevity 6 decades later.

Page 94: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

An early, famous paper

• Title: PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS AND SUSCEPTIBILITY TO THE COMMON COLD Author(s): COHEN S, TYRRELL DAJ, SMITH APSource: NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE Volume: 325 Issue: 9 Pages: 606-612 Published: AUG 29 1991

Page 95: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Researchers need to understand these mind-body interconnections better.

Page 96: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

• Another interesting issue is how we might match (or validate) well-being data with measures of mental health.

Page 97: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Consider the famous U shape in well-being through life.

Say a sceptic disbelieved all well-being data and just would not change his or her mind.

Page 98: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

One route would be to use data that independently confirm the patterns in happiness regression equations.

Page 99: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

One route would be to use data that independently confirm the patterns in happiness regression equations.

Here is an example.

Page 100: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Antidepressants

Work joint with Blanchflower on antidepressant consumption in Europe.

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Page 102: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Proportion of Europeans taking antidepressants (regression-adjusted) through life

Page 103: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

What about causality?

Page 104: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Forthcoming paper by Nick Powdthavee (in the Journal of Human Capital)

Page 105: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Nick Powdthavee’s work on blood pressure and education

Page 106: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

The drop in hypertension

Page 107: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

His regression equations

Page 108: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Results for males

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Results for females

Page 110: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Some conclusions today

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#1

Mixed evidence on ‘education gradients’ in heart biomarker equations.

Page 112: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

#2

A variable for the consumption of fruit and vegetables works strongly.

Page 113: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

#3

After we control for fruit and vegetables, income plays a clear role only in heart-rate and C-reactive protein equations...

Page 114: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

#3

After we control for fruit and vegetables, income plays a clear role only in heart-rate and C-reactive protein equations... and the income gradient looks small.

Page 115: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Heart Rate (Page 24 of Blanchflower et al)

Page 116: Mental Health and Biomarkers Andrew Oswald IZA and Warwick.

Could you go back to the Blanchflower et al biomarkers paper (hard copy).