Objective: To assess the effect of the Australian Disability Support Pension (DSP) on the symptomology of depression and anxiety over and above the effects of reporting a disability itself.
Methods: We used the Household Income Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey from 2004 to 2017. We used fixed effects regression to understand mental health differences (using the Mental Health Inventory-5 [MHI-5]) when a person reported: i) a disability; or ii) a disability and receiving the DSP) compared to when they reported no disability. The models controlled for time-varying changes in the severity of the disability and other time-related confounders.
Results: There was a 2.97-point decline (95%CI -3.26 to -2.68) in the MHI-5 when a person reported a disability compared to waves in which they reported no disability and 4.48-point decline (95%CI -5.75 to -3.22) when a person reported both a disability and being on the DSP compared to waves in which they reported neither.
Conclusions: Results suggest that accessing and being in receipt of the DSP can impact the mental health of people with disabilities. Implications for public health: Government income support policies should address the unintended adverse consequences in already vulnerable populations.
Keywords: cohort; disability pension; disability support; fixed effects regression; mental health.
© 2020 The Authors.