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Social capital, trust in the health-care system and self-rated health: The role of access to health care in a population-based study.

Mohseni, Mohabbat LU and Lindström, Martin LU (2007) In Social Science and Medicine 64(7). p.1373-1383
Abstract
This paper investigates the relationship between institutional trust in the health-care system, i.e. an institutional aspect of social capital, and self-rated health, and whether the strength of this association is affected by access to health-care services. The 2004 public health survey in the Scania region of Sweden is a cross-sectional study; a total of 27,963 respondents aged 18–80 years answered a postal questionnaire, which represents 59% of the random sample. Logistic regression model was used to investigate the association between institutional trust and self-rated health. Multivariate analyses of self-rated health were performed in order to investigate the importance of possible confounders (age, country of origin, education,... (More)
This paper investigates the relationship between institutional trust in the health-care system, i.e. an institutional aspect of social capital, and self-rated health, and whether the strength of this association is affected by access to health-care services. The 2004 public health survey in the Scania region of Sweden is a cross-sectional study; a total of 27,963 respondents aged 18–80 years answered a postal questionnaire, which represents 59% of the random sample. Logistic regression model was used to investigate the association between institutional trust and self-rated health. Multivariate analyses of self-rated health were performed in order to investigate the importance of possible confounders (age, country of origin, education, economic stress, generalized trust in other people, and care-seeking behaviour) on this association. A 28.7% proportion of the men and 33.2% of the women reported poor self-rated health. A total of 15.0% and 58.3% of the respondents reported “very high” and “rather high” trust in the health-care system, respectively. Almost one-third of all respondents reported low institutional trust. Respondents born outside Sweden, with low/medium education, low generalized trust and low institutional trust had significantly higher odds ratios of poor self-rated health. Multiple adjustments for age, country of origin, education, economic stress, and horizontal trust had some effect on the significant relationship between institutional trust and poor self-rated health, for both men and women, but the additional introduction of care-seeking behaviour in the model substantially reduced the odds ratios. In conclusion, low trust in the health-care system is associated with poor self-rated health. This association may be partly mediated by “not seeking health care when needed”. However, this is a cross-sectional exploratory study and the causality may go in both directions. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Social capital, Horizontal trust, Self-rated health, Care-seeking behaviour, Access to health care, Sweden, Institutional trust
in
Social Science and Medicine
volume
64
issue
7
pages
1373 - 1383
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • wos:000245497900005
  • scopus:33847382357
  • pmid:17202025
ISSN
1873-5347
DOI
10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.11.023
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
68cf7581-1390-468c-b833-264c9d58be75 (old id 165156)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 11:45:43
date last changed
2022-04-28 19:39:03
@article{68cf7581-1390-468c-b833-264c9d58be75,
  abstract     = {{This paper investigates the relationship between institutional trust in the health-care system, i.e. an institutional aspect of social capital, and self-rated health, and whether the strength of this association is affected by access to health-care services. The 2004 public health survey in the Scania region of Sweden is a cross-sectional study; a total of 27,963 respondents aged 18–80 years answered a postal questionnaire, which represents 59% of the random sample. Logistic regression model was used to investigate the association between institutional trust and self-rated health. Multivariate analyses of self-rated health were performed in order to investigate the importance of possible confounders (age, country of origin, education, economic stress, generalized trust in other people, and care-seeking behaviour) on this association. A 28.7% proportion of the men and 33.2% of the women reported poor self-rated health. A total of 15.0% and 58.3% of the respondents reported “very high” and “rather high” trust in the health-care system, respectively. Almost one-third of all respondents reported low institutional trust. Respondents born outside Sweden, with low/medium education, low generalized trust and low institutional trust had significantly higher odds ratios of poor self-rated health. Multiple adjustments for age, country of origin, education, economic stress, and horizontal trust had some effect on the significant relationship between institutional trust and poor self-rated health, for both men and women, but the additional introduction of care-seeking behaviour in the model substantially reduced the odds ratios. In conclusion, low trust in the health-care system is associated with poor self-rated health. This association may be partly mediated by “not seeking health care when needed”. However, this is a cross-sectional exploratory study and the causality may go in both directions.}},
  author       = {{Mohseni, Mohabbat and Lindström, Martin}},
  issn         = {{1873-5347}},
  keywords     = {{Social capital; Horizontal trust; Self-rated health; Care-seeking behaviour; Access to health care; Sweden; Institutional trust}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{7}},
  pages        = {{1373--1383}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Social Science and Medicine}},
  title        = {{Social capital, trust in the health-care system and self-rated health: The role of access to health care in a population-based study.}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/2630068/625858.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.11.023}},
  volume       = {{64}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}