Veenstra Gerry
Department of Anthropology and Sociology, The University of British Columbia, 6303 N. W. Marine Dr., Vancouver, Canada, V6T 1Z1.
Soc Sci Med. 2005 May;60(9):2059-71. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.08.064. Epub 2004 Nov 13.
After decades of epidemiological exploration into individual-level risk factors for ill health, a recent surge of interest in the health effects of socially patterned attributes of geographically defined 'places' has given the structural side of the agency-structure debate new prominence in population health research. Utilizing two original data sets, one pertaining to features of communities in British Columbia, Canada and the other to characteristics of individuals living in them, this article distinguishes the health effects of socially patterned attributes of communities, including the social capital of communities, from the health effects of characteristics of residents that contribute to social capital, e.g., trust and participation in voluntary associations. Results from multilevel analysis demonstrated that, of three different individual-level measures of health and well-being (and including measures of long-term limiting illness and self-rated health), only a measure of depressive symptoms had variability that could be reasonably attributed to the level of the community. The social capital of communities in the form of the availability of public spaces explained some of this variability, but in the direction contrary to expectations. Overall, location (community of residence) did little to explicate health inequalities in this context. The strongest predictors of health in multivariate and multilevel models were characteristics of individual survey respondents, namely, income, trust in politicians and governments, and trust in other members of the community. Breadth of participation in networks of voluntary association was not significantly related to health in multivariate models.
在对个体层面健康不良风险因素进行了数十年的流行病学探索之后,最近人们对地理上界定的“场所”的社会模式属性对健康的影响兴趣激增,这使得能动性与结构之争的结构方面在人口健康研究中重新受到关注。本文利用两个原始数据集,一个涉及加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省社区的特征,另一个涉及居住在这些社区中的个体的特征,区分了社区的社会模式属性(包括社区的社会资本)对健康的影响,与有助于形成社会资本的居民特征(如信任和参与志愿协会)对健康的影响。多层次分析结果表明,在三种不同的个体层面的健康和幸福感衡量指标(包括长期限制性疾病和自评健康指标)中,只有抑郁症状指标的变异性能够合理地归因于社区层面。以公共空间可用性形式存在的社区社会资本解释了部分这种变异性,但方向与预期相反。总体而言,在这种情况下,地理位置(居住社区)对解释健康不平等作用不大。在多变量和多层次模型中,健康的最强预测因素是个体调查对象的特征,即收入、对政治家和政府的信任以及对社区其他成员的信任。在多变量模型中,参与志愿协会网络的广度与健康没有显著关联。