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Income Volatility and Mental Health, Pilot Study

C

Cornell University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Depression

Treatments

Behavioral: Work opportunities

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06357286
IRB0148156

Details and patient eligibility

About

Income instability is a defining aspect of the lives of the poor, who also disproportionately suffer from poor mental and physical health. Our research is the first to assess the causal effects of predictable and unpredictable income instability on the psychological and physical health of the poor. It will advance the scientific knowledge on the effects of economic instability as well as our understanding of health disparities.

Full description

The poor suffer disproportionally from poor mental and physical health. Many causes for these disparities have been considered, including low income. But, poor families' incomes are not only low, but also often unstable and unpredictable. This instability creates uncertainty about whether they will be able to safeguard their future wellbeing. According to the allostatic load framework, prolonged activation of physiological stress responses will cause "wear and tear" on the body, heightening risks of cardiovascular disease and of age-related metabolic diseases, promoting cognitive decline and dementia, and accelerating cellular aging.

This research will study the causal effects of income instability on the psychological and physical health of the poor. Our specific aims are to: 1) Identify the causal effect of income instability on psychological health (e.g. depression, anxiety), biomarkers of stress (e.g. cortisol), and physical health (e.g. blood pressure), 2) Decompose the effects identified in aim 1 into the effects of predictable and unpredictable instability and compare to the impact of increasing the average level of income, and 3) Investigate the channels through which effects on health occur, including both economic and behavioral channels and estimate the impact of key moderating factors (e.g. age, gender, baseline mental health).

The trial will be conducted in northern Ghana. We will manipulate income instability by varying the number of work hours (and hence earnings) of participants in a cash-for-work program. Participants in the first treatment arm will have a fixed work schedule, with the same hours and earning each period. The hours and earnings of a second treatment arm will vary over time, but the fluctuations will be known in advance. Finally, the number of work hours and earnings of a third treatment arm will fluctuate unpredictably. Each of these arms will be compared to a control group that is surveyed, but not offered additional work. Importantly, we will vary income instability while holding the average level of income constant in order to disentangle the impact of instability from the level-effect.

The full study will create 1,867 new jobs that would not otherwise be available during the lean season when jobs are scarce. The intervention has been designed so that the job opportunity cannot make them worse off than they would otherwise have been in the absence of research.

Please note this registration is for a pilot study (n= approximately 400) prior to the main experiment. As such, we anticipate the pilot will be underpowered and do not expect to find significant effects.

Enrollment

390 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • between the ages of 18 and 65
  • female
  • lives in a household with fewer than 5 adults

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnancy at enrollment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

390 participants in 4 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
The Control arm will not be hired by the cash-for-work program but will be surveyed.
Stable income arm
Experimental group
Description:
The Stable Income arm will work the same number of hours (36) and earn the same amount (108 cedis) every period.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Work opportunities
Predictable Instability Arm
Experimental group
Description:
The hours and earnings of the Predictable Instability arm will vary over time. In three periods, the participant will work longer hours (60) and will earn more (180 cedis). In the remaining three periods, she will work fewer hours (12) and will earn less (36 cedis). Crucially, she will be able to predict all swings in her study earnings in the future-i.e., she will know her hours and earnings in each future period.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Work opportunities
Unpredictable Instability Arm
Experimental group
Description:
The hours and earnings of the Unpredictable Instability arm will vary unpredictably over time. In any given period, there will be a 50% chance that she works longer hours (60) and earns more (180 cedis) and a 50% chance that she works fewer hours (12) and earns less (36 cedis).
Treatment:
Behavioral: Work opportunities

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Leandro Carvalho, PhD; Heather Schofield, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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