Department of Epidemiology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, 2-5-1 Shikata-cho, Kita-ku, Okayama 700-8558, Japan.
BMC Public Health. 2010 Aug 17;10:489. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-489.
Social capital is hypothesized to be relevant to health promotion, and the association between community social capital and cigarette smoking has been examined. Individual-level social capital has been found to be associated with smoking cessation, but evidence remains sparse on the contextual effect of social capital and smoking. Further, evidence remains sparse on the association between smoking and social capital in the workplace, where people are spending an increasing portion of their daily lives. We examined the association between workplace social capital and smoking status among Japanese private sector employees.
We employed a two-stage stratified random sampling procedure. Of the total of 1,800 subjects in 60 companies, 1,171 (men/women; 834/337) employees (65.1%) were identified from 46 companies in Okayama in 2007. Workplace social capital was assessed in two dimensions; trust and reciprocity. Company-level social capital was based on inquiring about employee perceptions of trust and reciprocity among co-workers, and then aggregating their responses in order to calculate the proportion of workers reporting mistrust and lack of reciprocity. Multilevel logistic regression analysis was conducted using Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods to explore whether individual- and company-level social capital was associated with smoking. Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% credible intervals (CIs) for current smoking were obtained.
Overall, 33.3% of the subjects smoked currently. There was no relationship between individual-level mistrust of others and smoking status. By contrast, one-standard deviation change in company-level mistrust was associated with higher odds of smoking (OR: 1.25, 95% CI: 1.06-1.46) even after controlling for individual-level mistrust, sex, age, occupation, educational attainment, alcohol use, physical activity, body mass index, and chronic diseases. No clear associations were found between lack of reciprocity and smoking both at the individual- and company-level.
Company-level mistrust is associated with higher likelihood of smoking among Japanese employees, while individual perceptions of mistrust were not associated. The link between lack of reciprocity and smoking was not supported either at the individual- or company-level. Further studies are warranted to examine the possible link between company-level trust and smoking cessation in the Japanese workplace.
社会资本被认为与健康促进有关,社区社会资本与吸烟之间的关系已被研究。个体层面的社会资本与戒烟有关,但关于社会资本和吸烟的背景效应的证据仍然很少。此外,在人们每天越来越多地生活的工作场所,关于吸烟与社会资本之间的关联的证据仍然很少。我们研究了日本私营部门员工工作场所社会资本与吸烟状况之间的关系。
我们采用两阶段分层随机抽样程序。在 60 家公司的总共 1800 名受试者中,2007 年在冈山县的 46 家公司中从 60 家公司中确定了 1171 名(男性/女性;834/337)员工(65.1%)。工作场所社会资本评估了两个维度;信任和互惠。公司层面的社会资本是通过询问员工对同事之间的信任和互惠的看法,并对他们的回答进行汇总,以计算报告不信任和缺乏互惠的工人比例来确定的。使用马尔可夫链蒙特卡罗方法进行多水平逻辑回归分析,以探讨个体和公司层面的社会资本是否与吸烟有关。获得了当前吸烟的优势比(OR)和 95%可信区间(CI)。
总体而言,有 33.3%的受试者目前吸烟。个体层面上对他人的不信任与吸烟状况之间没有关系。相比之下,即使在控制了个体层面的不信任,性别,年龄,职业,教育程度,饮酒,体育锻炼,体重指数和慢性病后,公司层面的不信任程度增加一个标准差与吸烟的可能性更高(OR:1.25,95%CI:1.06-1.46)。在个体和公司层面上,缺乏互惠与吸烟之间都没有明确的关联。
公司层面的不信任与日本员工中吸烟的可能性增加有关,而个体对不信任的看法则没有关联。个体和公司层面缺乏互惠与吸烟之间也没有联系。需要进一步的研究来检验日本工作场所中公司层面的信任与戒烟之间可能存在的联系。