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Social capital and collective efficacy in Hungary: cross sectional associations with middle aged female and male mortality rates

机译:匈牙利的社会资本和集体效能:与中年男女死亡率的横断面关联

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摘要

>Objectives: Social capital, collective efficacy, and religious involvement have each been linked to population health. This study examined the relations between these measures and male/female mortality rates in Hungary. >Design: Cross sectional, ecological study. >Setting: 150 sub-regions of Hungary. >Participants and methods: 12 643 people were interviewed in 2002 (the "Hungarostudy 2002" survey). Social capital was measured by lack of social trust, reciprocity between citizens, and membership in civil organisations. Collective efficacy was measured by survey items from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods. Religious involvement was measured by church attendance. >Main outcome measure: Gender specific all cause mortality rates for the middle aged population (45–64 years) in the 150 sub-regions of Hungary, provided by the Central Statistical Office (CSO). >Results: Social capital, collective efficacy, as well as religious involvement were each significantly associated with middle age mortality. After education, collective efficacy showed the strongest association with mortality in both men and women. Among men, socioeconomic status, collective efficacy, social distrust, competitive attitude, reciprocity, and membership of civic organisations explained 68.0% of the sub-regional variations in mortality rates. Among women the same variables explained only 29.3% of the variance in mortality rates. Religious involvement was protective among women. >Conclusion: Collective efficacy and social capital are significant predictors of mortality rates in both men and women across sub-regions of Hungary. Gender differences in the relative importance of social factors may help to explain the differential impact of economic transformation on mortality rates for men and women in Central-Eastern European countries.
机译:>目标:社会资本,集体效能和宗教参与都与人口健康相关。这项研究检查了这些措施与匈牙利男性/女性死亡率之间的关系。 >设计:横截面生态研究。 >设置:匈牙利的150个子区域。 >参与者和方法: 2002年接受了12 643人的访问(“ Hungarostudy 2002”调查)。社会资本的衡量标准是缺乏社会信任,公民之间的对等以及民间组织的成员资格。集体效力通过芝加哥邻里人类发展项目的调查项目进行衡量。宗教的参与度以教会的出席率来衡量。 >主要结果指标:由中央统计局(CSO)提供的针对性别的所有原因均导致匈牙利150个分地区的中年人口(45-64岁)死亡。 >结果:社会资本,集体效能以及宗教信仰均与中年死亡率显着相关。在接受教育之后,无论是男性还是女性,集体功效都显示出与死亡率之间最强的关联。在男性中,社会经济地位,集体效能,社会不信任感,竞争态度,对等性和公民组织的成员构成了该地区次区域死亡率变化的68.0%。在女性中,相同的变量仅解释了死亡率差异的29.3%。宗教参与对妇女具有保护作用。 >结论:集体效力和社会资本是匈牙利次区域男女死亡率的重要预测指标。社会因素相对重要性中的性别差异可能有助于解释中东欧国家经济转型对男女死亡率的不同影响。

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