PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Impact of social class on health: The mediating role of health self-management.

  • Xiaoyong Hu,
  • Tiantian Wang,
  • Duan Huang,
  • Yanli Wang,
  • Qiong Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254692
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. e0254692

Abstract

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BackgroundStudies have explored the relationship between social class and health for decades. However, the underlying mechanism between the two remains not fully understood. This study aimed to explore whether health self-management had a mediating role between social class and health under the framework of Socio-cultural Self Model.Methods663 adults, randomly sampled from six communities in Southwest China, completed the survey for this study. Social class was assessed using individuals' income, education, occupation. Health self-management was assessed through evaluation of the health self-management behavior, health self-management cognition, health self-management environment. Physical health and mental health were measured by the Chinese version of Short-Form (36-item) Health Survey, which contains Physical Functioning, Role-Physical, Role-Emotional, Vitality, Mental Health, Social Function, Bodily Pain and General Health. Pearson's correlation was used to examine the associations between major variables. Mediation analyses were performed to explore the mediating role of health self-management.ResultsSocial class positively predicted self-rated health. The lower the social class, the lower the self-reported physical and mental health. Health self-management partially mediated the relationship between social class and self-rated health. That is, the health self-management ability of the lower class, such as access to healthy and nutritious food and evaluate their own health status, is worse than that of the higher class, which leads to physical and mental health inequality between the high and the low classes.ConclusionHealth self-management mediated the relationship between social class and health. Promoting health self-management abilities are conducive to improving both physical and mental health.