Social capital and cigarette smoking: New empirics featuring the Norwegian HUNT data.

Econ Hum Biol

Department of Health Management and Health Economics, University of Oslo, 0373 Oslo, Norway.

Published: August 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study analyzes a Norwegian data set to understand how social capital influences cigarette smoking rates, focusing on community trust, organizational participation, and cohabitation.
  • Results indicate a strong negative correlation between smoking and social capital factors, with statistical models consistently showing that higher community trust, engagement in activities, and living with others reduce smoking likelihood.
  • The paper discusses the implications of these findings for understanding health behavior and social capital, while also acknowledging methodological limitations and proposing areas for further investigation.

Article Abstract

Using a rich Norwegian longitudinal data set, this study explores the effects of different social capital variables on the probability of cigarette smoking. There are four social capital variables available in two waves of our data set. Our results based on probit (and OLS) analyses (with municipality fixed-effects) show that the likelihood of smoking participation is negatively and significantly associated with social capital attributes, namely, community trust (-0.017), participation in organizational activities (-0.032), and cohabitation (-0.045). Significant negative associations were also observed in panel data, pooled OLS, and random effects models for community trust (-0.024; -0.010) and cohabitation (-0.040; -0.032). Fixed-effects models also showed significant negative effects for cohabitation (-0.018). Estimates of alternative instrumental variables (IV) based on recursive bivariate probit and IV-GMM models also confirmed negative and significant effects for three of its characteristics: cohabitation (-0.030; -0.046), community trust (-0.065; -0.075), and participation in organizational activities (-0.035; -0.046). The limitations of our conclusions are discussed, and the significance of our study for the field of social capital and health is described, along with suggested avenues for future research.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ehb.2017.04.003DOI Listing

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