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The distribution
of factors, such as social inequality, changes at the community level, and may take
distinctive forms in various communities. This has health consequences for the social
groups and individuals within communities. Since it is a prime objective of the social
science perspective in medicine or public health to assess the context in which macro and
micro units change, greater insight into causal processes are possible when including the
complex nesting of individuals in groups, within neighborhoods, within cities or rural
environments, and within societies and nations (Rose, 1995). Social inequality is included
in the Moscow health profile as a community context which has important health
consequences for individuals. Social inequality may be altered by public policy and
modifying such community conditions has also been effective in changing individual health,
without “blaming the victim” (McKeehan, 1995). This is the first multilevel study of
urban health in Russia. Multilevel studies have not been published previously because most
health research in the Soviet and post-Soviet period concentrated either on macro or micro
level data. However, social contexts, geographic and environmental variables in Russia
have been implicated in differentially affecting psychosocial processes which impact on
individuals’ health. |