Department of Sociology, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China.
Department of Sociology, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210008, China.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2018 Nov 26;15(12):2644. doi: 10.3390/ijerph15122644.
Although numerous studies have shown the importance of an individual's socioeconomic status on his or her self-rated health status, less well-known is whether self-perceived class mobility, a measure highly correlated with an individual's de facto social class and past mobility experiences, affects self-rated health. In this paper, we attempt to fill the gap by examining how perception of class mobility is associated with self-rated health. Using eight waves of Chinese General Social Survey data spanning the years 2005 to 2015, we conducted an analysis at the micro (individual) level and the macro (provincial) level. Analyses at both levels yielded consistent results. At the individual level, we employed ordered logistic regression and found that the perception of experiencing downward mobility was associated with significantly lower self-rated health in both rural and urban areas compared with those who consider themselves to be upwardly mobile or immobile. At the provincial level, the findings from static panel analysis further revealed that there is a positive relationship between the self-perceived class mobility and self-rated health level.
虽然许多研究表明个人的社会经济地位对其自评健康状况很重要,但鲜为人知的是,自我感知的阶级流动性(与个人的实际社会阶层和过去的流动经历高度相关的衡量标准)是否会影响自评健康。本文试图通过考察阶级流动性的认知如何与自评健康相关联来填补这一空白。我们使用了 2005 年至 2015 年期间的八次中国综合社会调查数据,在微观(个体)和宏观(省级)层面进行了分析。两个层面的分析都得出了一致的结果。在个体层面,我们采用有序逻辑回归发现,与自认为向上流动或不流动的人相比,经历向下流动的感知与农村和城市地区的自评健康状况显著降低有关。在省级层面,静态面板分析的结果进一步表明,自我感知的阶级流动性与自评健康水平之间存在正相关关系。