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菲律宾男性的身体健康与生命历程转变:“婚姻选择”的证据,但不是伴侣关系和为人父身份的保护效应。

Men's physical health and life history transitions in the Philippines: Evidence for 'marital selection' but not protective effects of partnering and fatherhood.

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, 46556, USA; Eck Institute for Global Health, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, 46556, USA.

Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, 48109, USA.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2024 Apr;346:116732. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116732. Epub 2024 Feb 28.

Abstract

In Euro-American societies, married people typically have lower overall risks for total mortality and for certain chronic conditions compared to non-married people. However, people becoming partnered and parents also tend to gain weight in Euro-American settings. Few studies have tested whether links between physical health and life history status translate to other cultural contexts where the socio-ecological dynamics of family life may differ. This limits the application of these insights to men's well-being in global public health. To help address this gap, we drew on a large, long-running birth cohort study of Filipino men, using data collected at three waves between 2005 and 2014 when men were 21.5-30.5 years old (N = 607, obs. = 1760). We tested for the effects of the transition to partnering (marriage/cohabitation) and fatherhood on men's physical health (waist circumference, fat-free mass index, and grip strength). Men becoming partnered or partnered fathers (P/PF) had comparable longitudinal physical health trajectories to men remaining single non-fathers. However, men who became P/PF by their mid 20s had higher fat-free mass index values than single non-fathers at each wave, with the largest effect observed when all men were single non-fathers at baseline. Men who became P/PF by their early 30s were also stronger than the reference group at baseline. Thus, men who were more muscular and stronger at baseline were more likely to transition to P/PF status, consistent with a 'marital selection' model. In complementary analyses, men did not exhibit adverse health effects when they became partnered fathers as young adults or parents to infants, respectively. These findings suggest that links between health and life history transitions in this setting differ from those commonly observed in Euro-American societies. While transitions to marriage and fatherhood are promising windows for interventions to improve men's health, our results highlight the importance of tailoring such approaches to local dynamics.

摘要

在欧美社会中,与非已婚人士相比,已婚人士的总体死亡率和某些慢性疾病的风险通常较低。然而,在欧美环境中,人们成为伴侣和父母后往往也会体重增加。很少有研究测试身体状况与生活史状况之间的联系是否适用于其他文化背景,因为家庭生活的社会生态动态可能有所不同。这限制了这些见解在全球公共卫生领域对男性健康的应用。为了帮助解决这一差距,我们利用了一项针对菲律宾男性的大型长期出生队列研究,该研究的数据收集于 2005 年至 2014 年期间的三个波次,当时男性年龄在 21.5-30.5 岁(N=607,观察值=1760)。我们测试了成为伴侣(婚姻/同居)和父亲对男性身体健康(腰围、无脂肪质量指数和握力)的影响。成为伴侣或伴侣父亲的男性(P/PF)与保持单身非父亲的男性具有相似的纵向身体健康轨迹。然而,在 20 多岁中期成为 P/PF 的男性在每个波次的无脂肪质量指数值都高于单身非父亲,而在所有男性均为单身非父亲的基线时观察到的效果最大。在 30 岁出头成为 P/PF 的男性在基线时也比参考组更强壮。因此,在基线时肌肉更发达、更强壮的男性更有可能过渡到 P/PF 状态,这与“婚姻选择”模型一致。在补充分析中,当男性分别在年轻成年或婴儿期成为伴侣父亲时,他们并没有表现出不良的健康影响。这些发现表明,在这种背景下,健康与生活史过渡之间的联系与在欧美社会中常见的联系不同。虽然过渡到婚姻和父亲身份是改善男性健康的有希望的切入点,但我们的研究结果强调了根据当地动态调整此类方法的重要性。

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