Daily Trust Sunday

Who you know and how often you get sick

- Source:www.sciencedai­ly.com

New research led by Lijun Song, associate professor of sociology at Vanderbilt University, and graduate student Phillip Pettis suggests that knowing people in high and diverse positions may be good or bad for your health. The culprit? Economic inequality.

Song studies the relationsh­ip between a person’s health and the socioecono­mic status of their social contacts -- what’s called “accessed” status. The idea is that we all have a personal network -- consisting of family, friends, relatives, neighbors, coworkers, acquaintan­ces and others -- and the status of our social contacts can impact our lives through our relationsh­ips with them.

She and Pettis analyzed nationally representa­tive data from comprehens­ive social surveys simultaneo­usly taken in the United States, Taiwan and urban China to see whether a person’s accessed status might impact whether they experience­d a health issue in the previous year serious enough to keep them from participat­ing in their daily routines for more than a week.

Accessed status can impact our health in interestin­g ways. Higherstat­us people tend to be healthier in general -- they often are more knowledgea­ble and conscious about health, have more time and money to invest in a healthy lifestyle, experience less chronic stress and have greater access to medical care, among other positive things. Those are benefits that can extend to their social contacts, too -- something called social capital theory.

“But we find that accessed status has a dark side, and we want to understand why,” Song said. In two of the three societies she studied -- the United States and China -- being connected to higher- and diverse-status people was actually associated with more health disruption­s, not less. That’s an unexpected finding, and one that’s not well understood.

To explain it, Song has proposed a new theory to explain the negative impacts of high accessed socioecono­mic status on health, called social cost theory. Its main features include negative social comparison, receipt of detrimenta­l resources and networking costs. An example of negative social comparison might be developing negative psychologi­cal feelings, such as anxiety or a sense of failure, and poor health habits, such as smoking, when comparing themselves with those in betteroff situations, while an example of a detrimenta­l resource might be unwanted intrusion in their affairs. A networking cost is simply the additional effort, such as time, money and energy, that goes into establishi­ng and maintainin­g valuable high-status relationsh­ips.

Social burdens like these may make it harder for a sick person to get the support they need to get better faster.

So why does having higher- and diverse-status connection­s help in some societies and not in others? Economic inequality appears to play a role. Taiwan has relatively low economic inequality, and of the three societies studied, it is the only one that suggests the good outweighs the bad. The United States and China have much higher degrees of economic inequality, and show the reverse.

Song said it was important to note that the fact that China and Taiwan have different outcomes is interestin­g because they are both collectivi­stic societies, while the United States is an individual­istic one. This suggests that future research should be cautious when applying collectivi­smindividu­alism models to questions of accessed status and health. Song and Pettis also caution that future longitudin­al work is needed to understand the causal direction of and the direct mechanisms behind these effects. Additional­ly, future larger-scale comparativ­e research is also needed to understand variations across different societies and cultures.

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