农村社区的幸福感和社会网络特征:来自英国康沃尔郡社会住房队列的调查结果。

Emily Long, Sebastian Stevens, Raluca Topciu, Andrew James Williams, Timothy James Taylor, Karyn Morrissey
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引用次数: 1

摘要

生活在资源贫乏和农村地区的人的精神健康是公共卫生的优先事项。尽管有证据表明社交网络和心理健康之间存在联系,但在农村和资源贫乏的环境中,人们对这种关系知之甚少。目前的研究使用新颖的社会网络方法来调查社会网络的规模和组成在多大程度上与英国农村社会住房社区的心理健康有关。数据来自康沃尔郡88名住在社会住房中的个人。这些参与者是2017年和2018年对329个社会住房家庭进行调查的更大规模研究的一部分。心理健康通过沃里克-爱丁堡心理健康量表(SWEMWBS)进行测量。我们使用一系列多变量线性回归模型来检验社会网络特征与心理健康之间的关系。社会网络规模与SWEMWBS显著相关(b = 0.39, p
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Wellbeing and Social Network Characteristics in Rural Communities: Findings from a Cohort in Social Housing in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

The mental wellbeing of those living in resource poor and rural localities is a public health priority. Despite evidence of a link between social networks and mental wellbeing, little is known about this relationship in the context of rural and resource poor environments. The current study uses novel social network methodology to investigate the extent to which social network size and composition is related to mental wellbeing in a social housing community in rural England. Data come from 88 individuals living in social housing in Cornwall. These participants are part of a larger study of 329 social housing households surveyed in 2017 and 2018. Mental wellbeing was measured by the Short Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (SWEMWBS). A series of multivariable linear regression models were used to test associations between social network characteristics and mental wellbeing. Social network size was significantly associated with the SWEMWBS (b = 0.39, p < 0.01), such that individuals with larger networks reported better mental wellbeing, but after controlling for community social cohesion, this effect dissipated. Neither gender composition or talking with network members about health and wellbeing were significantly associated with the SWEMWBS. Findings suggest that both the quantity of social connections and perceptions of community cohesion are moderately associated with mental wellbeing in rural and resource poor localities. As such, efforts to improve mental wellbeing would benefit from targeting multiple aspects of social relationships, rather than focusing solely on increasing the size of individuals' social networks.

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