Poverty drives North-South mental health divide
PEOPLE in the north of England suffered more mental health problems during the pandemic than those in the south — and the main cause was poverty, a study has found.
Research from Northern universities and NHS hospital trusts published today says a “parallel pandemic” of mental health problems has cost the British economy £2 billion.
The findings come from the Northern Health Science Alliance (NHSA), which includes 10 universities and 10 NHS hospital trusts.
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