Department of Research and Development, HealthNet TPO, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Glob Health Action. 2011;4. doi: 10.3402/gha.v4i0.6351. Epub 2011 Jun 15.
Despite national and international policies to develop social capital in disaster-affected communities, empiric evidence on the association between social capital and disaster mental health is limited and ambiguous.
The study explores the relationship between social capital and disaster mental health outcomes (PTSD, anxiety, and depression) in combination with individual factors (appraisal, coping behavior, and social support).
This is a community-based cross-sectional study in a flood-affected town in northern England. The study is part of the MICRODIS multi-country research project that examines the impact of natural disasters. It included 232 flood-affected respondents.
The findings showed that a considerable part of the association between cognitive and structural social capital and mental health is exerted through individual appraisal processes (i.e. property loss, primary and secondary appraisal), social support, and coping behavior. These individual factors were contingent on social capital. After the inclusion of individual characteristics, cognitive social capital was negatively related to lower mental health problems and structural social capital was positively associated to experiencing anxiety but not to PTSD or depression. Depression and anxiety showed a different pattern of association with both components of social capital.
Individual oriented stress reducing interventions that use appraisal processes, social support, and coping as starting points could be more effective by taking into account the subjective experience of the social context in terms of trust and feelings of mutual support and reciprocity in a community. Findings indicate that affected people may especially benefit from a combination of individual stress reducing interventions and psychosocial interventions that foster cognitive social capital.
尽管国家和国际政策都致力于在受灾社区发展社会资本,但实证证据表明社会资本与灾害心理健康之间的关联有限且模糊。
本研究探讨了社会资本与灾害心理健康结果(创伤后应激障碍、焦虑和抑郁)之间的关系,同时结合了个体因素(评估、应对行为和社会支持)。
这是一项在英格兰北部受洪水影响的城镇进行的基于社区的横断面研究。该研究是 MICRODIS 多国研究项目的一部分,该项目旨在研究自然灾害的影响。它包括 232 名受洪水影响的受访者。
研究结果表明,认知和结构社会资本与心理健康之间的很大一部分关联是通过个体评估过程(即财产损失、初级和次级评估)、社会支持和应对行为来发挥作用的。这些个体因素取决于社会资本。在纳入个体特征后,认知社会资本与较低的心理健康问题呈负相关,结构社会资本与焦虑呈正相关,但与创伤后应激障碍或抑郁无关。抑郁和焦虑与社会资本的两个组成部分表现出不同的关联模式。
以个体为导向的减轻压力干预措施可以更有效地利用评估过程、社会支持和应对作为起点,同时考虑到社区中信任和相互支持、互惠的主观社会环境体验。研究结果表明,受灾人群可能特别受益于将个体减轻压力干预措施与促进认知社会资本的心理社会干预相结合。