Kutek Stephanie M, Turnbull Deborah, Fairweather-Schmidt A Kate
School of Psychology Freemasons Foundation Centre for Men's Health, School of Psychology, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Aust J Rural Health. 2011 Feb;19(1):20-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1584.2010.01172.x.
To examine the effects of social support and sense of community on rural men's subjective well-being, considering the main effects and stress-buffer models.
Cross-sectional population-based survey, non-probability sampling frame primarily convenience sampling.
Community-based setting.
A total of 185 men aged 18+ years from rural South Australia.
Subjective well-being, measured by the Satisfaction With Life Scale.
Two-step hierarchical multiple regression analysis was conducted, with subjective well-being as the dependent variable, controlling for independent variables of age, living alone and farm employment. Social support was the most effective predictor of well-being, followed by stress, and only a very modest contribution from sense of community; total variance explained was 56% (F(6,178) = 37.77, P < 0.001, R² =0.56, adjusted R² = 0.55, R² change = 0.07, P < 0.001). Stress partially mediated both the social support/well-being and sense of community/well-being relationships (mediation analysis).
Results demonstrated the benefits of social support on well-being using the stress-buffer and main effects models, within a sample of rural men, and explored the relatively unexamined relationship between sense of community and well-being. Rural men have considerable stress impacting their well-being. This study identifies that it is critical for individuals, organisations and policy makers to be aware of the capacity of both social supports and sense of community to buffer stress and promote well-being within rural men. Furthermore, structural, community-based approaches might have greater capacity to cost-effectively provide this support, contrasting with the growing trend towards individual-based approaches for mental health.
考虑主效应模型和压力缓冲模型,研究社会支持和社区归属感对农村男性主观幸福感的影响。
基于人群的横断面调查,非概率抽样框架,主要为便利抽样。
社区环境。
来自南澳大利亚农村地区的185名18岁及以上男性。
采用生活满意度量表测量主观幸福感。
进行了两步分层多元回归分析,以主观幸福感为因变量,控制年龄、独居和农场就业等自变量。社会支持是幸福感最有效的预测因素,其次是压力,社区归属感的贡献非常小;解释的总方差为56%(F(6,178) = 37.77,P < 0.001,R² = 0.56,调整后R² = 0.55,R²变化 = 0.07,P < 0.001)。压力部分介导了社会支持/幸福感和社区归属感/幸福感之间的关系(中介分析)。
研究结果在农村男性样本中,利用压力缓冲模型和主效应模型证明了社会支持对幸福感的益处,并探讨了相对较少研究的社区归属感与幸福感之间的关系。农村男性承受着相当大的压力,影响着他们的幸福感。本研究表明,个人、组织和政策制定者必须认识到社会支持和社区归属感在缓冲农村男性压力和促进其幸福感方面的能力。此外,基于社区的结构性方法可能更有能力以成本效益高的方式提供这种支持,这与心理健康领域日益倾向于基于个人的方法形成对比。