Erschienen in:
27.01.2021 | Concise Research Report
Network Size or Proximity? Association of Network Characteristics with Violence-Related Stress and PTSD Among Racial/Ethnic Minorities in Chicago
verfasst von:
Ololade Akingbade, BS, Monica E. Peek, MD, MPH, Elizabeth L. Tung, MD, MS
Erschienen in:
Journal of General Internal Medicine
|
Ausgabe 1/2022
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Excerpt
The growing epidemic of violence in urban cities has been linked to stress-related health disorders and PTSD.
1 Social networks, broadly defined as an individual’s personal and professional relationships, may be protective against these consequences.
2 However, studies on network
size have been mixed.
2 We hypothesized that network
proximity, the physical closeness of network confidants, may help explain differences in the level of protection conferred by social networks. In this study, we compared network size alone versus network size
and proximity, to examine associations between these characteristics and psychosocial health (violence-related stress and PTSD) in a high-risk population. …