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Andrew McCulloch Institute for Economic and
Social Research, University of Essex, Colchester CO4 3SQ amccul{at}essex.ac.uk
Researchers are increasingly interested in studying
the effects of the social environment on health.1 The
concept of social capital has been put forward as one explanation
for why some communities work better than others, with benefits for the
whole of the local population.2 Social capital is applied
to those features of a community that promote cohesion and a sense of
belonging and that enable its members to cooperate. Similarly,
criminologists have argued that the level of social organisation
in a neighbourhood, or the degree to which residents are able to
realise common goals and exercise social control, links the social
composition of a neighbourhood and rates of deviant
behaviour.3 We investigated how individual's reports of
social capital and social disorganisation are associated with health
outcomes among men and women aged 16 to 54 from a representative cross
section of British households.
Table 1.
The British Household Panel Study is an annual survey of a
representative cross section of British households.4 The
first wave of interviews took place between September and December
1991. Our analysis is based on surveys in 1998 and 1999. Respondents were asked eight questions about their neighbourhood. We summed responses and divided them into low, medium, high, and very high levels
of social capital. We also summed responses to eight questions about
various community problems and divided them into low, medium, high, and
very high levels of social disorganisation. We assessed psychiatric
morbidity using the 12 item general health questionnaire.5 People scoring 3 or more were classified as cases. We also analysed reported physical health problems related to arms, legs, or hands (including arthritis); chest or breathing; and heart or blood pressure.
We used logistic regression analysis to examine the relative influence
of social capital and perceived disorganisation on health after
controlling for other factors. Separate models were computed for men
and women.
The table shows the number of men and women with poor health outcomes
for each level of social capital and social disorganisation. Men in the
lowest category of social capital were more likely to report
psychiatric morbidity than men in the highest category (odds ratio
1.96, 95% confidence interval 1.39 to 2.75). Men in the lowest
quartile of social disorganisation were less likely to report chest or
breathing problems than men in the highest category (0.59, 0.36 to
0.97). Psychiatric morbidity was more common among women in the lowest
categories of social capital compared with women in the highest
category (1.80, 1.36 to 2.38). Women in the lowest category of social
disorganisation had lower rates of psychiatric (0.72, 0.52 to 0.99) and
heart or blood pressure problems (0.52, 0.21 to 0.91) than those in the
highest category. These associations were independent of individual
age, education, smoking, material deprivation, marital status, social
support, and economic activity.
We found that people in the lowest categories of social capital
had increased risk of psychiatric morbidity and that those in the
lowest categories of social disorganisation had lower rates of some
health problems. This research adds to the evidence on the influence of
social environments on health.
Social relationships lead to the development of norms of trust and
reciprocity that have spillover effects within neighbourhoods as a
whole. Resources are potentially available to everyone within the
neighbourhood, not just those who invest in maintaining relationships. Likewise, conditions that lead to social disorganisation are not associated just with individual victims but are detrimental to the
health of all members of society. Understanding the ways in which the
social environment affects health is important to improve our knowledge
of how health inequalities arise and how they can potentially be reduced.
Questionnaires and further details about the British Household Panel
Study are available at www.iser.essex.ac.uk/bhps
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Methods and results
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Methods and results
Comment
References
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Comment
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Methods and results
Comment
References
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: AMcC is the sole contributor to this paper.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: ESRC Grant L130251010.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. | Marmot M. Improvement of social environment to improve health. Lancet 1998; 351: 57-60[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 2. | Campbell C. Social capital and health. London: Health Education Authority, 1999. |
| 3. | Sampson RJ, Groves WB. Community structure and crime: testing social disorganization theory. Am J Sociol 1989; 94: 774-802[CrossRef]. |
| 4. | Taylor MF. British household panel survey user manual volume A: introduction, technical report and appendices. Colchester: University of Essex, 1999. |
| 5. | Goldberg DP. The detection of psychiatric illness by questionnaire. London: Oxford University Press, 1972. |
(Accepted 4 July 2001)