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Several
indicators of social cohesion (lack of trust in government, crime rates), and social
capital (work relations, not voting) were found to predict life expectancy and 1994
mortality rates for Russia, independently of poverty levels and per capita income (Kennedy
et al., 1998). Indicators of trust in informal networks and formal, political or
government, activities have been applied as measures of social cohesion in several major
surveys in Russia, America, and Europe. Relative social inequality and surrounding poverty
increase social disorganization through lack of public trust and deterioration of social
norms. Formal networks, as civic group memberships, have been related to the maintenance
and sustenance of social trust and norms, and consequently to lower rates of violence,
assault, and robberies (Kaplan et al., 1996; Kawachi and Kennedy, 1997a, 1997b). These
studies were conducted at either the ecological or individual level, and did not consider
the joint or independent effect of each level on health outcomes. The distribution of
social connectivity varies with community and geographic conditions, especially in a large
and culturally diverse nation like Russia, which requires a complex multi-stage stratified
survey design. The effect of this diversity on outcome is lost if analyzed as a single
sample at the lowest level. Multilevel models provide greater insight into the causal path
by which health habits or psychosocial behaviors influence health given variations in the
structure of communities, and prevent making Type I errors by controlling design effects. |