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日本的政治意识形态与健康:一项细分分析。

Political ideology and health in Japan: a disaggregated analysis.

机构信息

Department of Society, Human Development and Health, Harvard School of Public Health, 677 Huntington Avenue, Kresge Building, 7th floor, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

出版信息

J Epidemiol Community Health. 2010 Sep;64(9):838-40. doi: 10.1136/jech.2009.097915. Epub 2010 Jul 7.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Recent studies from the USA and Europe suggest an association between an individual's political ideology and their health status, with those claiming to be conservatives reporting better health. The presence of this association is examined in Japan.

METHODS

Individual-level data from the 2000-3, 2005 and 2006 Japan General Social Survey were analysed. The outcomes of interest were self-rated poor health and smoking status. The independent variable of interest was reported political beliefs on a 5-point 'left'-to-'right' scale. Covariates included age, sex, education, income, occupational status and fixed effects for survey periods. Logistic regression models were estimated.

RESULTS

There was an inverse association between political ideology (left to right) and self-rated poor health as well as between ideology and smoking status even after adjusting for age, sex, socioeconomic status and fixed effects for survey periods. Compared with those who identified as 'left', the OR for reporting poor health and smoking among those who identified as 'right' was 0.86 (95% CI 0.74 to 0.99) and 0.80 (95% CI 0.70 to 0.91), respectively.

CONCLUSIONS

Health differences by political ideology have typically been interpreted as reflecting socioeconomic differences. The results from Japan corroborate the previous findings from the USA and Europe that socioeconomic differences do not account for health differences by political ideologies. Political ideology is likely to be a marker of several latent values and attitudes (eg, religiosity, individual responsibility and/or community participation) that might be beneficial for health at the individual level.

摘要

背景

美国和欧洲的近期研究表明,个人的政治意识形态与其健康状况之间存在关联,自称保守派的人报告的健康状况更好。本研究在日本检验了这种关联的存在。

方法

对 2000-3、2005 和 2006 年日本综合社会调查的个体水平数据进行了分析。感兴趣的结果是自评健康状况差和吸烟状况。感兴趣的自变量是在 5 点“左”-“右”尺度上报告的政治信仰。协变量包括年龄、性别、教育、收入、职业状况和调查期间的固定效应。使用逻辑回归模型进行估计。

结果

即使在调整了年龄、性别、社会经济地位和调查期间的固定效应后,政治意识形态(从左到右)与自评健康状况差以及与吸烟状况之间仍然存在负相关。与自认为“左派”的人相比,自认为“右派”的人报告健康状况差和吸烟的 OR 分别为 0.86(95%CI 0.74 至 0.99)和 0.80(95%CI 0.70 至 0.91)。

结论

政治意识形态导致的健康差异通常被解释为反映了社会经济差异。日本的研究结果证实了来自美国和欧洲的先前发现,即社会经济差异并不能解释政治意识形态导致的健康差异。政治意识形态可能是几个潜在价值观和态度(例如,宗教信仰、个人责任和/或社区参与)的标志,这些价值观和态度可能对个人层面的健康有益。

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