Social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. The case of Iceland in 2007 and 2009

Meistaraprófsritgerð frá CHESS, Centre for Health Equity Studies. CHESS stofnunin byggir á samstarfi milli Stokkhólmsháskóla og Karolinska Institutet. Abstract The frequently studied concept of social capital has often been related to health, but the conceptualisation and measurement of the concept...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harpa Sif Eyjólfsdóttir 1987-
Other Authors: Landsbókasafn Íslands
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/13453
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spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/13453 2023-05-15T16:46:45+02:00 Social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. The case of Iceland in 2007 and 2009 Félagsauður, heilsa og mikilvægi svefns Harpa Sif Eyjólfsdóttir 1987- Landsbókasafn Íslands 2012-05 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/13453 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/13453 Lýðheilsa Svefnrannsóknir Thesis 2012 ftskemman 2022-12-11T06:50:57Z Meistaraprófsritgerð frá CHESS, Centre for Health Equity Studies. CHESS stofnunin byggir á samstarfi milli Stokkhólmsháskóla og Karolinska Institutet. Abstract The frequently studied concept of social capital has often been related to health, but the conceptualisation and measurement of the concept is an on-going debate. The main aim of this thesis is to study the relationship of four different indicators of social capital; informal social capital, formal social capital, trust towards institutions and trust towards others, with self-rated physical health and self-rated mental health in Iceland in 2009, shortly after a harsh economic crash. Insomnia symptoms will be studied as a possible mediator or moderator in the relationship. Furthermore, longitudinal data on informal social capital will be used to see the causal effect of social capital on health and to see if informal social capital decreased after the economic collapse. Population-based panel data from Iceland in 2007 and 2009 will be used to perform both cross-sectional analysis (n = 3,243) and longitudinal analysis (n = 3,131). The main results are that the four indicators of social capital all relate differently to physical and mental self-rated health, and insomnia symptoms seem to mediate the relationship between social capital and health, especially physical health. Surprisingly, informal social capital did increase during the economic collapse. The panel analysis further suggests that having poor informal social capital has causal effects on poor self-rated mental health when adjusted for symptoms of insomnia, age, gender, family status, education and smoking. Key words: Social capital, self-rated physical health, self-rated mental health, symptoms of insomnia, Iceland, cross-sectional study, longitudinal study. Thesis Iceland Skemman (Iceland)
institution Open Polar
collection Skemman (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftskemman
language English
topic Lýðheilsa
Svefnrannsóknir
spellingShingle Lýðheilsa
Svefnrannsóknir
Harpa Sif Eyjólfsdóttir 1987-
Social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. The case of Iceland in 2007 and 2009
topic_facet Lýðheilsa
Svefnrannsóknir
description Meistaraprófsritgerð frá CHESS, Centre for Health Equity Studies. CHESS stofnunin byggir á samstarfi milli Stokkhólmsháskóla og Karolinska Institutet. Abstract The frequently studied concept of social capital has often been related to health, but the conceptualisation and measurement of the concept is an on-going debate. The main aim of this thesis is to study the relationship of four different indicators of social capital; informal social capital, formal social capital, trust towards institutions and trust towards others, with self-rated physical health and self-rated mental health in Iceland in 2009, shortly after a harsh economic crash. Insomnia symptoms will be studied as a possible mediator or moderator in the relationship. Furthermore, longitudinal data on informal social capital will be used to see the causal effect of social capital on health and to see if informal social capital decreased after the economic collapse. Population-based panel data from Iceland in 2007 and 2009 will be used to perform both cross-sectional analysis (n = 3,243) and longitudinal analysis (n = 3,131). The main results are that the four indicators of social capital all relate differently to physical and mental self-rated health, and insomnia symptoms seem to mediate the relationship between social capital and health, especially physical health. Surprisingly, informal social capital did increase during the economic collapse. The panel analysis further suggests that having poor informal social capital has causal effects on poor self-rated mental health when adjusted for symptoms of insomnia, age, gender, family status, education and smoking. Key words: Social capital, self-rated physical health, self-rated mental health, symptoms of insomnia, Iceland, cross-sectional study, longitudinal study.
author2 Landsbókasafn Íslands
format Thesis
author Harpa Sif Eyjólfsdóttir 1987-
author_facet Harpa Sif Eyjólfsdóttir 1987-
author_sort Harpa Sif Eyjólfsdóttir 1987-
title Social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. The case of Iceland in 2007 and 2009
title_short Social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. The case of Iceland in 2007 and 2009
title_full Social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. The case of Iceland in 2007 and 2009
title_fullStr Social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. The case of Iceland in 2007 and 2009
title_full_unstemmed Social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. The case of Iceland in 2007 and 2009
title_sort social capital, self-rated health and the importance of sleep. the case of iceland in 2007 and 2009
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/13453
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1946/13453
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