Electronic versions

Documents

DOI

Background: Social capital may be a social good in health terms, but it is not necessarily a universal good. Several studies have shown that while there is a positive association between ecological social capital and health in people with high individual-level social capital, this relationship is weaker or even reversed in those with low individual-level social capital. Such studies, however, have used relatively coarse levels of geography for quantifying ecological social capital. The present study looks at this relationship at a more fine-grained spatial scale.
Methods: Data from the National Survey for Wales (n=27,828, weighted mean age=48.4) were linked with previously published small-area estimates (n=410) of ecological social capital for Wales. Mixed effects models were then used to assess whether the relationship between mental wellbeing and self-reported health on one hand, and ecological social capital (sense of belonging) on the other, was moderated by individual-level social capital.
Results: The models found the same moderation of the relationship that has been demonstrated previously: Although ecological social capital is positively associated with health in respondents with high individual-level social capital, the relationship is negative in those with low individual-level social capital.
Conclusion: This study replicates this association at a spatial scale orders of magnitude more fine-grained than had been shown previously. Ecological social capital is not an unambiguously positive factor for public health, and may be a risk factor for marginalised people.

Keywords

  • Social capital, geography, mental health, multilevel modelling, self-rated health
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)349-356
JournalJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health
Volume75
Issue number4
Early online date7 Nov 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2021

Prof. activities and awards (1)

View all

Total downloads

No data available
View graph of relations