Does Caregiver’s Social Bonding Enhance the Health of their Children?:The Association between Social Capital and Child Behaviors
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Abstract
Little is known about the association between social capital and child behaviors. This study aims to investigate that association. A complete population-based, cross-sectional survey was conducted for all the caregivers with preschool children in a rural town in Okayama prefecture in Japan. Two dimensions of individual-level social capital and unhealthy child behaviors were reported by parent-administered questionnaire. We analyzed 354 preschool children (57.6% of all children for whom questionnaires were completed). Children whose main caregiver had high cognitive social capital were 89% less likely to miss breakfast (odds ratio [OR]=0.11;95% confidence interval [CI]:0.01-1.03). Children whose caregiver had high structural social capital were 71% less likely to wake up late (OR=0.29;95% CI:0.12-0.71) and 78% less likely to skip tooth brushing more than once per day (OR=0.22;95% CI:0.05-0.93). Both cognitive and structural social capital were negatively associated with unhealthy child behaviors. A further intervention study is needed to confirm the impact of social capital on child behavior.
Journal
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- Acta Medica Okayama
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Acta Medica Okayama 66 (4), 343-350, 2012-08
Okayama University Medical School
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Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390853649749664128
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- NII Article ID
- 120004622483
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- NII Book ID
- AA00508441
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- ISSN
- 0386300X
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- PubMed
- 22918207
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- Text Lang
- en
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
- IRDB
- PubMed
- CiNii Articles