Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, UK.
Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, UK.
Soc Sci Med. 2019 Sep;236:112425. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112425. Epub 2019 Jul 16.
There is a growing body of literature suggesting that the arts can support mental health. However, both arts participation and cultural engagement are unevenly patterned across the population, with a strong social gradient. This social gradient is also evident in mental health. So it remains unclear whether the relationship between arts engagement and mental health can in fact be explained by socio-economic status (SES). This study explores this question specifically in relation to cultural engagement (e.g. visiting museums/galleries/cinema/theatre/concerts) using data from 8780 adults aged 50 + from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. We used a statistical triangulation approach, running three separate sets of analyses that each have different strengths and address different statistical limitations or biases. Using logistic regression, the relationship between cultural engagement and mental health was still present when including covariates relating to SES, and there was no evidence of moderation by SES either through the inclusion of interaction terms or stratification. Using propensity score matching, matching participants based on their SES, we also consistently found evidence of the relationship. Finally, using fixed-effects regression which takes account of all time-invariant factors (which include multiple aspects of SES) even if unobserved, we also found no attenuation of the relationship. Overall, this confirms previous reports that cultural engagement is linked with a lower odds of depression amongst adults aged 50 + by demonstrating a robust association in a nationally-representative sample of older adults. While SES does explain around half of the association between cultural engagement and depression, we found no evidence that it either acts as a moderator or the main explanatory factor, with independent associations maintained across all three approaches. However, the fact that higher SES is associated with more frequent engagement indicates that, in population terms, SES is still an important determinant of the salutogenic impact of culture.
越来越多的文献表明,艺术可以支持心理健康。然而,无论是艺术参与还是文化参与,在人口中的分布都不均衡,存在强烈的社会阶层差异。这种社会阶层差异在心理健康中也很明显。因此,尚不清楚艺术参与和心理健康之间的关系实际上是否可以用社会经济地位(SES)来解释。本研究特别探讨了与文化参与(例如参观博物馆/美术馆/电影院/剧院/音乐会)相关的问题,使用了来自英国老龄化纵向研究的 8780 名 50 岁及以上成年人的数据。我们使用了一种统计三角分析方法,运行了三组独立的分析,每组分析都有不同的优势,并解决了不同的统计限制或偏差。使用逻辑回归,当包含与 SES 相关的协变量时,文化参与与心理健康之间的关系仍然存在,并且通过包含交互项或分层,也没有 SES 调节的证据。使用倾向评分匹配,根据 SES 匹配参与者,我们也一致发现了这种关系的证据。最后,使用固定效应回归,考虑到所有时间不变因素(包括 SES 的多个方面),即使是未观察到的因素,我们也没有发现关系的减弱。总的来说,这证实了之前的报告,即文化参与与 50 岁及以上成年人的抑郁几率较低有关,通过在一个具有代表性的老年人群体样本中展示出稳健的关联,证明了这一点。虽然 SES 确实解释了文化参与和抑郁之间关联的一半左右,但我们没有发现证据表明 SES 是一个调节因素或主要解释因素,在所有三种方法中都保持了独立的关联。然而,较高的 SES 与更频繁的参与相关,这表明,从人口角度来看,SES 仍然是文化的有益影响的一个重要决定因素。