Social Quality and Health: Examining Individual and Neighbourhood Contextual Effects Using a Multilevel Modelling Approach

被引:0
|
作者
Daniel Holman
Alan Walker
机构
[1] University of Sheffield,Department of Sociological Studies
来源
Social Indicators Research | 2018年 / 138卷
关键词
Social quality; Social determinants; Neighbourhood effects; Self-rated health; Multilevel modelling;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Social quality focusses on the nature of ‘the social’, arguing that people are realised as social beings through interacting with a range of collectives, both from the formal world of systems and the informal lifeworld. Four conditional factors are necessary for this to occur, which at the same time are assumed to influence health and well-being: socio-economic security, social cohesion, social inclusion and social empowerment. In this paper we test the utility of social quality in explaining self-rated health as a response to arguments that the social determinants of health (SDH) framework often lacks a theoretical basis. We use multilevel models to analyse national English and Welsh data (the Citizenship Survey) to test for both individual- and neighbour-level affects. Our key findings are that (1) neighbourhood contextual (cross-level) effects are present with respect to collective action, personal trust, cross-cutting ties, income sufficiency, and income security; (2) measures of national, community and personal identity as indicators of social cohesion show clear associations with health alongside more common measures such as trust; (3) the security aspects of socioeconomic determinants are especially important (housing security, income sufficiency, and income security); (4) social rights, including institutional rights but especially civil rights have effects of particularly large magnitude. Social quality offers a theoretically-driven perspective on the SDH which has important policy implications and suggests a number of promising avenues for future research.
引用
收藏
页码:245 / 270
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Individual and contextual determinants of victimisation in Brazilian urban centres: A multilevel approach
    Moura, Klebson
    Neto, Raul Silveira
    [J]. URBAN STUDIES, 2016, 53 (08) : 1559 - 1573
  • [22] When does neighbourhood matter? Multilevel relationships between neighbourhood social fragmentation and mental health
    Ivory, Vivienne C.
    Collings, Sunny C.
    Blakely, Tony
    Dew, Kevin
    [J]. SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2011, 72 (12) : 1993 - 2002
  • [23] Natural outdoor environment, neighbourhood social cohesion and mental health: Using multilevel structural equation modelling, streetscape and remote-sensing metrics
    Liu, Yuqi
    Wang, Ruoyu
    Lu, Yi
    Li, Zhigang
    Chen, Hongsheng
    Cao, Mengqiu
    Zhang, Yuerong
    Song, Yimeng
    [J]. URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING, 2020, 48
  • [24] Social capital impact on individual health due to neighbours or the neighbourhood?
    Mohnen, S. M.
    Groenewegen, P. P.
    Volker, B.
    Flap, H.
    Subramanian, S. V.
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2010, 20 : 42 - 42
  • [25] Individual and contextual determinants of infant mortality in Brazilian state capitals: a multilevel approach
    de Souza Maia, Livia Teixeira
    de Souza, Wayner Vieira
    Gouveia Mendes, Antonio da Cruz
    [J]. CADERNOS DE SAUDE PUBLICA, 2020, 36 (02):
  • [26] Contextual and individual assessment of dental pain period prevalence in adolescents: a multilevel approach
    Marco A Peres
    Karen G Peres
    Antônio C Frias
    José Leopoldo F Antunes
    [J]. BMC Oral Health, 10
  • [27] Contextual and individual assessment of dental pain period prevalence in adolescents: a multilevel approach
    Peres, Marco A.
    Peres, Karen G.
    Frias, Antonio C.
    Antunes, Jose Leopoldo F.
    [J]. BMC ORAL HEALTH, 2010, 10
  • [28] Examining mental health in adults with intellectual disability: The benefits of multilevel modelling
    Straccia, Claudio
    Hofmann, Verena
    Barisnikov, Koviljka
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL & DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITY, 2020, 45 (03): : 241 - 244
  • [29] The contextual effects of neighbourhood access to supermarkets and convenience stores on individual fruit and vegetable consumption
    Pearce, J.
    Hiscock, R.
    Blakely, T.
    Witten, K.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, 2008, 62 (03): : 198 - 201
  • [30] Examining Individual Differences Effects: An Experimental Approach
    Adnan, Wan Adilah Wan
    Noor, Nor Laila Md
    Daud, Nik Ghazali Nik
    [J]. HUMAN CENTERED DESIGN, PROCEEDINGS, 2009, 5619 : 570 - 575