Takemi Programin International Health, Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
JW LEE Center for Global Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
BMJ Open. 2019 Apr 20;9(4):e023036. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023036.
The interaction between positive and negative social support as well as each domain of social support and income on depressive symptom has not been much explored. We aimed to examine the associations of positive and negative social support with the risk of depressive symptoms among urban-dwelling adults in Korea, focusing on those interaction effects.
We used the first wave of a large-scale cohort study called The Health Examinees-Gem Study. Positive and negative support scores ranged between 0 and 6; the variables were then categorised into low, medium, and high groups. A two-level random intercept linear regression model was used, where the first level is individual and the second is the community. We further tested for interactions between each domain of social supports and household income.
A survey conducted at 38 health examination centres and training hospitals in major Korean cities and metropolitan areas during 2009-2010.
21 208 adult men and women aged between 40 and 69 in Korea (mean age: 52.6, SD: 8.0).
Depressive symptoms score measured by Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale, with scores ranging from 0 to 60.
Level of positive and negative social support showed a negative and positive association with depressive symptom score with statistical significance at p<0.05, respectively. When the interaction terms among household income and social supports were examined, a negative association between level of positive social support and depressive symptom score was more pronounced as income was lower and level of negative social support was higher. Similarly, positive association between level of negative social support and depressive symptom score was more pronounced as income was lower and level of positive social support was lower.
Our findings suggest that strategies for encouraging positive social support and discouraging negative social support for disadvantaged individuals might be effective in reducing depression in Korea.
积极和消极社会支持以及社会支持的各个领域与收入对抑郁症状的相互作用尚未得到充分探讨。我们旨在检验积极和消极社会支持与韩国城市居民成年人抑郁症状风险之间的关联,重点关注这些相互作用效应。
我们使用了一项名为“健康受检者-宝石研究”的大型队列研究的第一波数据。积极和消极支持得分范围在 0 到 6 之间;然后将这些变量分为低、中、高三组。使用了两水平随机截距线性回归模型,其中第一水平是个体,第二水平是社区。我们进一步检验了每个社会支持领域与家庭收入之间的相互作用。
2009-2010 年期间在韩国主要城市和大都市区的 38 个健康检查中心和培训医院进行的一项调查。
韩国年龄在 40 至 69 岁之间的 21208 名男女成年人(平均年龄:52.6,标准差:8.0)。
积极和消极社会支持的水平与抑郁症状评分呈负相关和正相关,p<0.05 时具有统计学意义。当检验家庭收入和社会支持之间的交互项时,随着收入的降低和消极社会支持水平的升高,积极社会支持水平与抑郁症状评分之间的负相关更为明显。同样,随着收入的降低和积极社会支持水平的降低,消极社会支持水平与抑郁症状评分之间的正相关更为明显。
我们的研究结果表明,鼓励弱势群体积极的社会支持和抑制消极的社会支持的策略可能在韩国有效减少抑郁。