Friday, August 3, 2012

[EQ] Is social capital good for health? A European perspective

Is social capital good for health? A European perspective

Lorenzo Rocco, University of Padua, Italy

Marc Suhrcke, University of East Anglia, United Kingdom

WHO Regional Office for Europe - Copenhagen, Denmark – 2012

Available online PDF [24p.] at: http://bit.ly/OMAeLM


“……The aim of the research reported here was to examine the causal impact of social capital on health in 14 European countries. Using data from the European Social Survey for 14 European countries, supplemented by regional-level data, the authors studied whether individual and/or community-level social capital positively affects health.


The authors controlled for other relevant factors that are also expected to affect health, and addressed – via an instrumental variable approach – the challenge of assessing causality in the relationship between social capital and health. The large variance of the error term due to measurement errors calls for strong instruments to obtain reliable estimates in a finite sample.

The dataset is rich enough in information to allow the finding of a seemingly strong causal relationship between social capital and individual health. Community social capital (defined at regional level) appears not to affect health once individual-level social capital is controlled for. Taken at face value, the findings suggest that policy interventions should be targeted at improving primarily individual social capital. In doing so they would achieve a double effect: on the one hand they would directly improve individual health; on the other they would contribute to community social capital, which reinforces the beneficial role of individual social capital….”

 

“….The novelty of this study in terms of policy implications is the discovery that interventions attempting to improve health by building social capital should be targeted at improving primarily individual social capital, because in so doing they would achieve a double effect: on the one hand, they would directly improve individual health; on the other, they would contribute to community social capital, which reinforces the beneficial role of individual social capital. Exploiting such reinforcing mechanism could improve the (cost–)effectiveness of policies: an intervention that succeeds in improving the social capital of a large number of individuals in one community would produce a larger health benefit than one that targets the same number of individuals located in a number of different communities….”


 

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