Department of Social Work, Education, and Community Wellbeing, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE7 7XA, UK.
Department of Sociology, Durham University, 32 Old Elvet, Durham, DH1 3HN, UK.
Int J Equity Health. 2023 Mar 9;22(1):41. doi: 10.1186/s12939-023-01846-1.
Women experiencing three or more co-occurring issues (homelessness, substance misuse, mental health) are a highly vulnerable population associated with multimorbidity. Taking women's life stories of trajectories into social exclusion in the north of England as its focus, this paper aims to explore the complexity of social contexts in which women navigate extreme health inequalities. Of the few studies that have examined women's experiences of homelessness through the lens of social capital, most have focused on network size, rather than the quality and influence of the relationships which precipitate or contextualise experiences of social exclusion. We utilise case studies to offer a theoretically-grounded analysis which illustrates the relationship between social capital and homelessness within this population. Our results illustrate how structural contexts, and specifically social capital accrual and social bonding processes particularly pertinent to women can act to both ameliorate and perpetuate social exclusion. We conclude by arguing that health inequalities cannot be tackled as single-issue processes but instead are multi-layered and complex.
经历三个或更多共存问题(无家可归、药物滥用、心理健康)的女性是一个高度脆弱的群体,她们与多种疾病相关。本文以英格兰北部女性被社会排斥的生活轨迹为重点,旨在探讨女性在极端健康不平等状况下所处的社会环境的复杂性。在少数通过社会资本视角研究女性无家可归经历的研究中,大多数研究都集中在网络规模上,而不是关系的质量和影响,这些关系导致或构成了社会排斥的体验。我们利用案例研究提供了一种理论上的分析,说明了社会资本与这一人群中的无家可归之间的关系。我们的研究结果表明,结构背景,特别是与女性特别相关的社会资本积累和社会结合过程,可以起到缓解和延续社会排斥的作用。最后,我们认为健康不平等不能作为单一问题来解决,而是多层次和复杂的。