Cao Junran, Rammohan Anu
Discipline of Economics, UWA Business School, M251, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, 6009, WA, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2016 Jul 22;16:631. doi: 10.1186/s12889-016-3257-9.
A large international literature has found a positive association between social capital and measures of physical and mental health. However, there is a paucity of research on the links between social capital and healthy ageing in a developing country environment, where universal social security coverage is absent and health infrastructure is poor.
In this paper, we develop and empirically test a model of the linkages between social capital and the health outcomes for older adults in Indonesia, using data from the Indonesian Family Life Survey-East (IFLS-East), conducted in 2012. Using multivariate regression analysis, we examine whether social capital plays a role in mitigating poor health among older individuals aged 50 years and above in Indonesia's most vulnerable provinces. We test the robustness of these social capital variables across different health measures (self-assessed health, Activities of Daily Living (ADL), measures of chronic illness and mental health measures), as well as across different demographic groups, after controlling for an array of socio-economic, demographic and geographic characteristics.
Our findings show that access to better social capital (using measures of neighbourhood trust and community participation) is associated with a higher degree of physical mobility, independence, and mental well-being among older individuals but has no influence on chronic illnesses. These results are consistent when we estimate samples disaggregated by gender, rural/urban residence, and by age categories.
From a policy perspective these results point to the importance of social capital measures in moderating the influence of poor health, particularly in the Activities of Daily Living.
大量国际文献发现社会资本与身心健康指标之间存在正相关关系。然而,在一个缺乏全民社会保障覆盖且卫生基础设施薄弱的发展中国家环境中,关于社会资本与健康老龄化之间联系的研究却很少。
在本文中,我们利用2012年进行的印度尼西亚东部家庭生活调查(IFLS-East)的数据,开发并实证检验了一个关于印度尼西亚老年人社会资本与健康结果之间联系的模型。我们使用多元回归分析,研究社会资本是否在减轻印度尼西亚最脆弱省份50岁及以上老年人的健康不佳状况方面发挥作用。在控制了一系列社会经济、人口和地理特征之后,我们检验了这些社会资本变量在不同健康指标(自我评估健康、日常生活活动(ADL)、慢性病指标和心理健康指标)以及不同人口群体中的稳健性。
我们的研究结果表明,获得更好的社会资本(使用邻里信任和社区参与指标)与老年人更高程度的身体活动能力、独立性和心理健康相关,但对慢性病没有影响。当我们按性别、农村/城市居住情况和年龄类别对样本进行估计时,这些结果是一致的。
从政策角度来看,这些结果表明社会资本措施在减轻健康不佳影响方面的重要性,特别是在日常生活活动方面。