University of Nottingham Medical School at Derby, Medical Sciences and Graduate Entry Medicine, Derby, United Kingdom.
State University of New York, College at Plattsburgh, Department of Sociology, New York, United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Mar;344:116618. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116618. Epub 2024 Jan 27.
We performed 55 qualitative interviews with Americans from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds from a small city in the Northeast to better understand the complex process through which socioeconomic status (SES) influences the health practices persons carry out. We argue that SES not only influences health practices directly, but also via shaping interviewees' health lifestyles. We describe four connected ways that SES shapes interviewees' health lifestyles: (a) the impact of physical and mental illness on how much time, energy, and resources can be devoted to health; (b) the impact of social connections on opportunities to engage in healthy practices; (c) variation in interviewees' sense of control over health and health practices; and (d) how intentional and planned out interviewees' health lifestyles are. Although explored previously, the aim of this study is to examine how these elements come together to form into distinct styles of health shaped by the socioeconomic background of our respondents.
我们对来自美国东北部一个小城市的不同社会经济背景的 55 名美国人进行了 55 次定性访谈,以更好地了解社会经济地位(SES)影响个人实施健康实践的复杂过程。我们认为,SES 不仅直接影响健康实践,还通过塑造受访者的健康生活方式来影响。我们描述了 SES 塑造受访者健康生活方式的四种方式:(a)身心疾病对投入健康的时间、精力和资源的影响;(b)社会联系对参与健康实践机会的影响;(c)受访者对健康和健康实践的控制感的变化;以及(d)受访者的健康生活方式的计划性和规划性。尽管之前已经探讨过这些因素,但本研究的目的是研究这些因素如何结合在一起,形成由受访者的社会经济背景塑造的不同健康风格。