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The company you keep: Is socialising with higher-status people bad for mental health?

Authors
Lee, Min-AhKawachi, Ichiro
Issue Date
Sep-2017
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
social relationships; social comparison; social status; perceived unfairness; relative deprivation; gender; depressive symptoms; South Korea
Citation
SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS, v.39, no.7, pp 1206 - 1226
Pages
21
Journal Title
SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS
Volume
39
Number
7
Start Page
1206
End Page
1226
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/4006
DOI
10.1111/1467-9566.12580
ISSN
0141-9889
1467-9566
Abstract
Socialising with higher-status individuals can be hypothesised to exert opposing influences on the mental health of the ego. On the one hand, socialising with higher-status alters might enable individuals to access valuable resources. On the other hand, status-discrepant friendships could be detrimental to mental health by engendering feelings of unfairness. We sought to examine the impact of status-discrepant social relationships on depressive symptoms in the 2012 Korean General Social Survey (KGSS), a nationally representative sample. We show that socialising with higher-status people is positively associated with depressive symptoms. There is no significant difference between those socialising with equivalent-status or with lower-status alters. Perceived unfairness also increase depressive symptoms. Respondents socialising with higher-status alters tend to report greater depressive symptoms as their perceived unfairness increases. Gender-stratified analyses reveal that the detrimental impact of status-discrepant relationships are observed for men only, not for women. These findings suggest that socialising with higher-status people can be a net detriment for mental wellbeing by increasing stress/frustration or decreasing psychological resources such as self-esteem, and that these effects are more pronounced for individuals who perceive that society is unfair. This pattern appears stronger for men, which might be associated with gender roles internalised through gender socialisation processes.
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Lee, Min Ah
사회과학대학 (사회학과)
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