this post was submitted on 01 Jan 2026
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[–] technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

Contrary to popular narratives, random-effects models showed that individuals in more unequal areas do not report lower subjective well-being

Sus.

although inequality initially seemed to undermine mental health, the publication-bias-corrected association was null

Sus.

Meta-regressions revealed that the adverse association between inequality and mental health was confined to low-income samples.

Undermines the supposed point of the article, so they bury this without elaboration.

Moreover, machine-learning analyses

Sus.

No non-paywalled means of evaluating this study. No choice but to assume every other study is more worthwhile.

[–] FactChecker@lemmy.world 1 points 5 days ago (1 children)
[–] technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

That's cool. It still seems sus AF for the reasons that I added to my original comment.

For example, they're discounting research based on a "publication bias" but who determines the bias? What about their own bias?

Their other tools are equally questionable: random-effects, machine learning...

Perhaps most importantly they can't undermine the results for low income groups which seem to be the most important for this type of thing:

First, the meta-analytic association between economic inequality and mental health was negative only in low-income samples. This finding was replicated using Gallup data: In low-income contexts, a one-point increase in the Gini coefficient predicted a mental-health decline equivalent to moving from the 39 th to the 50th percentile of the within-country income distribution (for details on the benchmarking procedure, see SI, p. 37). This suggests that inequality may be particularly harmful to low-income populations, possibly by undermining community cohesion70 , fostering adverse social comparison71 , or fueling perceptions of unfairness 31 . Thus, even if inequality does not noticeably affect overall population mental health, it may still exacerbate disparities between income groups 55.

And, if their study doesn't apply to low income groups, does it actually apply to like semi-low-income? They're literally pulling every trick possible to generate evidence against the (obvious) theory work, but they still can't find anything to undermine the result for poor people. For some reason they think this doesn't matter, but honestly it makes me feel like their research doesn't matter. Especially when the title of their paper omits what I consider the most important part. I guess if the title were "No meta-analytical effect of economic inequality on well-being or mental health except for poor people", then nobody would care/fund. Sensational titles get sensational funding.

[–] felixwhynot@lemmy.world 3 points 5 days ago

Oh sure, NOW they wanna publish a negative result

[–] Gust@piefed.social 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

From the abstract, emphasis mine

"Moreover, although inequality initially seemed to undermine mental health, the publication-bias-corrected association was null"

Maybe this term is reasonable and I'm just not familiar with the field of study, but this sounds suspiciously like "when you ignore all the woke dei nonsense" dressed up in academic language.

Edit: it also points out that economic inequality does cause adverse mental health outcomes but only in low income people so that can be ignored for the conclusion. Honestly I feel like my takeaway is that getting published in Nature doesn't mean what it used to