Moore Spencer, Teixeira Ana C, Shiell Alan
Université de Montréal Montreal, Que., Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2006 Jul;63(1):165-78. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.12.009. Epub 2006 Feb 2.
Despite the call for a better understanding of macro-level factors that affect population health, social epidemiological research has tended to focus almost exclusively on national-level factors, such as Gross Domestic Product per capita (GDP/c) or levels of social cohesion. Using a world-systems framework to examine cross-national variations in infant mortality, this paper seeks to emphasize the effects of global trade on national-level population health. Rather than viewing national-level health indicators as autonomous from broader global contexts, the study uses network analysis methods to examine the effects of international trade on infant mortality rates. Network data for countries were derived from international data on the trade of capital-intensive commodities in 2000. Using automorphic equivalence to measure the degree to which actors in a network perform similar roles, countries were assigned into one of six world-system blocks, each with its own pattern of trade. These blocks were dummy-coded and tested using ordinary least squares (OLS) regression. A key finding from this analysis is that after controlling for national-level factors, the two blocks with the lowest density in capital-intensive exchange, i.e., the periphery, are significantly and positively associated with national-level infant mortality rates. Results show the effects of peripherality and stratification on population health, and highlight the influence of broader macro-level factors such as trade and globalization on national health.
尽管人们呼吁更好地理解影响人口健康的宏观层面因素,但社会流行病学研究几乎一直只专注于国家层面的因素,比如人均国内生产总值(GDP/c)或社会凝聚力水平。本文运用世界体系框架来研究婴儿死亡率的跨国差异,旨在强调全球贸易对国家层面人口健康的影响。该研究并非将国家层面的健康指标视为独立于更广泛的全球背景,而是使用网络分析方法来考察国际贸易对婴儿死亡率的影响。各国的网络数据源自2000年资本密集型商品贸易的国际数据。利用自同构等价来衡量网络中行为体扮演相似角色的程度,各国被归入六个世界体系板块之一,每个板块都有其自身的贸易模式。这些板块进行虚拟编码,并使用普通最小二乘法(OLS)回归进行检验。该分析的一个关键发现是,在控制了国家层面的因素之后,资本密集型交换中密度最低的两个板块,即外围板块,与国家层面的婴儿死亡率显著正相关。结果显示了边缘性和分层对人口健康的影响,并突出了贸易和全球化等更广泛的宏观层面因素对国家健康的影响。