Takakura Minoru
School of Health Sciences, University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan,
Int J Public Health. 2015 Sep;60(6):679-89. doi: 10.1007/s00038-015-0697-4. Epub 2015 Jun 30.
This cross-sectional study examined the effect of school-level structural social capital on smoking and drinking among Japanese youth.
Self-administered anonymous questionnaires were distributed to 3248 students at 29 high schools across Okinawa, Japan in 2008. Structural social capital was measured by students' participation in organized activities: student council, extracurricular activities, volunteer activities, community sports clubs, and youth associations. Contextual-level social capital was measured by aggregated school-level individual responses.
At the individual level, extracurricular activity participation was negatively associated with smoking and drinking, whereas participation in youth associations was positively associated with smoking and drinking. School-level extracurricular activity participation was negatively associated with smoking among boys, whereas school-level participation in youth associations was positively associated with smoking among boys and girls and drinking among boys.
This study suggests that structural social capital measured by participation in organized activities, especially extracurricular activities, might be an important way for youths to attain good health. This study also supports the idea that particular type of activities, such as youth associations, can lead to the so-called "dark side of social capital".
本横断面研究调查了学校层面的结构性社会资本对日本青少年吸烟和饮酒行为的影响。
2008年,对日本冲绳县29所高中的3248名学生发放了自填式匿名问卷。结构性社会资本通过学生参与有组织活动来衡量:学生会、课外活动、志愿活动、社区体育俱乐部和青年协会。情境层面的社会资本通过学校层面个体回答的汇总来衡量。
在个体层面,参与课外活动与吸烟和饮酒呈负相关,而参与青年协会与吸烟和饮酒呈正相关。学校层面的课外活动参与与男孩吸烟呈负相关,而学校层面的青年协会参与与男孩和女孩吸烟以及男孩饮酒呈正相关。
本研究表明,通过参与有组织活动,特别是课外活动来衡量的结构性社会资本,可能是青少年获得健康的重要途径。本研究还支持这样一种观点,即特定类型的活动,如青年协会,可能会导致所谓的“社会资本的阴暗面”。