Karhina Kateryna, Ng Nawi, Ghazinour Mehdi, Eriksson Malin
Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Epidemiology and Global Health, Umeå University, 901 87 Umeå, Sweden.
Police Education Unit, Umeå University, 901 87 Umeå, Sweden ; Department of Social Work, Umeå University, 901 87 Umeå, Sweden.
Int J Ment Health Syst. 2016 May 4;10:37. doi: 10.1186/s13033-016-0068-4. eCollection 2016.
Social capital is one of the social determinants of health, but there is still a lack of studies comparing its significance for health in different cultural settings. This study investigates and compares the relations between individual cognitive social capital and depressive symptoms and self-rated health in Sweden and Ukraine for men and women separately.
Two cross-sectional nationally representative surveys of adult populations were used for the analysis. Data from the Ukraine's World Health Survey and the Sweden's National Public Health Survey were analyzed in this comparative study.
The independent variable, cognitive social capital, was operationalized as institutional trust and feelings of safety. Depressive symptoms and self-rated health were used as the outcome variables. Crude and adjusted odds ratios and the 95 % confidence intervals were calculated using logistic regression. The model also adjusted for socio-demographic and lifestyle variables.
Institutional trust is higher in Sweden compared to Ukraine (31 % of the Swedes vs. 12 % of the Ukrainians reported high trust to their national government/parliament). There is a strong association between self-rated health and institutional trust for both sexes in Sweden (odds ratio/OR = 1.99; 95 % CI = 1.58-2.50 for women and OR = 1.82, CI = 1.48-2.24 for men who reported low institutional trust compared with those with high institutional trust) but only for women (OR = 1.88, CI = 1.12-3.15) in Ukraine. Trust thus seems to be more important for self-rated health of women and men in Sweden compared to their counterparts in Ukraine. Significant associations between depressive symptoms and institutional trust were not observed in either country after adjusting for socio-demographic and lifestyle factors. A lack of feeling of safety increased the odds of having depressive symptoms among women (OR = 1.97, CI = 1.41-2.76) and men (OR = 3.91, CI = 2.19-6.97) in Sweden. The same association was observed for poor self-rated health among Swedish women (OR = 2.15, CI = 1.55-2.99) and men (OR = 2.75, CI = 1.58-4.80). In Ukraine, a lack of feeling of safety did not show any significant association with self-rated health or depressive symptoms for men, but it increased the odds of depressive symptoms among women (OR = 1.72, CI = 1.13-2.62).
In general, individual cognitive social capital is higher in Sweden than in Ukraine, and there is a stronger association between cognitive social capital and self-rated health in Sweden than in Ukraine. Interventions aiming to increase cognitive social capital for health promoting purposes might be favorable in Sweden, but this is not evidently the case in Ukraine.
社会资本是健康的社会决定因素之一,但仍缺乏在不同文化背景下比较其对健康重要性的研究。本研究分别调查并比较了瑞典和乌克兰男性及女性个体认知社会资本与抑郁症状及自评健康之间的关系。
两项针对成年人口的全国代表性横断面调查用于分析。本比较研究分析了乌克兰世界卫生调查和瑞典国家公共卫生调查的数据。
自变量认知社会资本被操作化为机构信任和安全感。抑郁症状和自评健康用作结果变量。使用逻辑回归计算粗比值比和调整后的比值比以及95%置信区间。模型还对社会人口学和生活方式变量进行了调整。
与乌克兰相比,瑞典的机构信任度更高(31%的瑞典人对本国政府/议会高度信任,而乌克兰人这一比例为12%)。在瑞典,两性的自评健康与机构信任之间存在很强的关联(与高度信任机构的女性相比,低度信任机构的女性比值比/OR = 1.99;95% CI = 1.58 - 2.50;男性OR = 1.82,CI = 1.48 - 2.24),但在乌克兰仅女性存在这种关联(OR = 1.88,CI = 1.12 - 3.15)。因此,与乌克兰的同龄人相比,信任似乎对瑞典男性和女性的自评健康更为重要。在调整社会人口学和生活方式因素后,两国均未观察到抑郁症状与机构信任之间的显著关联。在瑞典,缺乏安全感会增加女性(OR = 1.97,CI = 1.41 - 2.76)和男性(OR = 3.91,CI = 2.19 - 6.97)出现抑郁症状的几率。瑞典女性(OR = 2.15,CI = 1.55 - 2.99)和男性(OR = 2.75,CI = 1.58 - 4.80)中,缺乏安全感与自评健康状况差也存在同样的关联。在乌克兰,缺乏安全感与男性的自评健康或抑郁症状未显示出任何显著关联,但会增加女性出现抑郁症状的几率(OR = 1.72,CI = 1.13 - 2.62)。
总体而言,瑞典的个体认知社会资本高于乌克兰,且瑞典认知社会资本与自评健康之间的关联比乌克兰更强。旨在为促进健康而增加认知社会资本的干预措施在瑞典可能是有利的,但在乌克兰并非如此。