Campbell C, Williams B, Gilgen D
Social Psychology, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK.
AIDS Care. 2002 Feb;14(1):41-54. doi: 10.1080/09540120220097928.
This paper reports on an exploratory study investigating links between sexual health and social capital in a South African mining community. In this study, social capital is defined in terms of people's membership of voluntary community organizations (e.g. church, residents' associations, youth groups). Using biomedical and social survey data from a stratified random sample of 1,211 Carletonville residents, we tested the hypothesis that organizational members were less likely to have HIV. Multivariate analysis of variance sought to identify significant associations between nine organizational memberships and HIV infection, as well as three risk factors for infection (casual partners, condom use with casual partners and alcohol consumption). Analysis yielded a range of significant results, but findings varied across age and gender, and were not all in the hypothesized direction. For example, young men and young women who belonged to sports clubs were less likely to be HIV-positive, and young women who belonged to sports clubs were more likely to use condoms with casual partners than non-members. Amongst members of stokvels (voluntary savings clubs accompanied by social festivities), however, young men were more likely to be HIV-positive, women of all ages were more likely to have a casual partner, and both young men and young women were more likely to drink alcohol than non-members. While our exploratory study has produced sufficient evidence to justify the need for further research in this area, it also highlights that the interface between HIV infection and social capital is a complex area that defies easy generalization.
本文报道了一项探索性研究,该研究调查了南非一个矿业社区性健康与社会资本之间的联系。在本研究中,社会资本是根据人们在自愿社区组织(如教会、居民协会、青年团体)中的成员身份来定义的。利用来自1211名卡尔顿维尔居民分层随机样本的生物医学和社会调查数据,我们检验了组织成员感染艾滋病毒可能性较低这一假设。多变量方差分析旨在确定九种组织成员身份与艾滋病毒感染之间的显著关联,以及三种感染风险因素(临时性伴侣、与临时性伴侣使用避孕套和饮酒)。分析得出了一系列显著结果,但研究结果因年龄和性别而异,且并非都符合假设方向。例如,属于体育俱乐部的年轻男性和年轻女性感染艾滋病毒呈阳性的可能性较小,属于体育俱乐部的年轻女性与临时性伴侣使用避孕套的可能性比非成员更大。然而,在储蓄互助会(伴有社交活动的自愿储蓄俱乐部)成员中,年轻男性感染艾滋病毒呈阳性的可能性更大,各年龄段女性有临时性伴侣的可能性更大,年轻男性和年轻女性饮酒的可能性都比非成员更大。虽然我们的探索性研究已经产生了足够的证据来证明有必要在这一领域进行进一步研究,但它也突出表明,艾滋病毒感染与社会资本之间的关系是一个复杂且难以简单概括的领域。