Faculty of Communication, Culture and Society, Università Della Svizzera Italiana, Via Buffi 13, 6900, Lugano, Switzerland.
Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Macau, Macau, China.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Aug 10;22(1):1525. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13895-2.
People's potentials to seek health information can be affected by their social context, such as their social networks and the resources provided through those social networks. In the past decades, the concept of social capital has been widely used in the health realm to indicate people's social context. However, not many such studies were conducted in China. Chinese society has its special quality that many Western societies lack: people traditionally render strong value to family relations and rely heavily on strong social ties in their social life. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the association between different types of social capital and health information-seeking behavior (HISB) in the Chinese context. The different types of social capital were primarily bonding and bridging, as well as cognitive and structural ones.
Our analysis is based on a total of 3090 cases taken from the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) - China, 2017. Dataset was weighted due to the overrepresentation of female respondents and hierarchical multiple regression analyses as well as binary logistic regression tests were operated to examine the associations between people's social capital and their HISB.
Some aspects of social capital emerged as positive predictors of HISB: information support (standing in for the cognitive component of social capital) promoted health information seeking, organization memberships (standing in for the structural component) encouraged cancer information seeking, and both the use of the internet and of traditional media for gaining health information were positively linked with bridging networks and organization memberships. Bonding networks (structural component) were not correlated with any other of the key variables and emotional support (cognitive social capital) was consistently associated with all health information-seeking indicators negatively.
Social capital demonstrated significant and complex relationships with HISB in China. Structural social capital generally encouraged HISB in China, especially the bridging aspects including bridging networks and organization memberships. On the other hand, emotional support as cognitive social capital damaged people's initiatives in seeking health-related information.
人们获取健康信息的能力可能会受到其社会环境的影响,例如他们的社交网络以及通过这些社交网络提供的资源。在过去的几十年中,社会资本的概念已被广泛应用于健康领域,用以表示人们的社会环境。然而,在中国,此类研究并不多。中国社会具有许多西方社会所缺乏的特殊品质:人们传统上重视家庭关系,并在社会生活中高度依赖强大的社会关系。因此,本研究旨在检验中国背景下不同类型的社会资本与健康信息寻求行为(HISB)之间的关联。不同类型的社会资本主要包括纽带型和桥接型,以及认知型和结构型。
我们的分析基于来自 2017 年健康信息国家趋势调查(HINTS)-中国的总共 3090 个案例。由于女性受访者的代表性过高,因此对数据集进行了加权处理,同时还进行了分层多元回归分析和二项逻辑回归检验,以检验人们的社会资本与他们的 HISB 之间的关联。
社会资本的某些方面被证明是 HISB 的积极预测指标:信息支持(代表社会资本的认知成分)促进了健康信息的寻求,组织成员资格(代表结构成分)鼓励了癌症信息的寻求,而互联网和传统媒体的使用与桥接网络和组织成员资格呈正相关。纽带型网络(结构成分)与其他任何关键变量都没有相关性,情感支持(认知社会资本)与所有健康信息寻求指标都呈负相关。
社会资本在中国与 HISB 之间存在显著且复杂的关系。结构型社会资本通常会鼓励中国的 HISB,特别是包括桥接网络和组织成员资格在内的桥接方面。另一方面,作为认知型社会资本的情感支持会损害人们寻求与健康相关信息的主动性。