Social Capital and Cardiac Rehabilitation. Social Variation of Lifestyles of Men from Contrasting Socioeconomic Groups

Social inequalities in health have been well documented in the literature. Despite the universal health care system and detailed measures of health surveillance, socioeconomic disparities related to cardiovascular diseases (CVD) remain present and are predicted to increase due to growing socioeconom...

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Main Author: Diotte, Julie
Other Authors: Dumas, Alexandre
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32169
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-2849
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-321692018-01-05T19:02:17Z Social Capital and Cardiac Rehabilitation. Social Variation of Lifestyles of Men from Contrasting Socioeconomic Groups Diotte, Julie Dumas, Alexandre Social Capital Pierre Bourdieu Cardiac Rehabilitation Heart Diseases Social Support Trust Social Cohesion Interviews Qualitative Social Variation Lifestyles Social inequalities in health have been well documented in the literature. Despite the universal health care system and detailed measures of health surveillance, socioeconomic disparities related to cardiovascular diseases (CVD) remain present and are predicted to increase due to growing socioeconomic inequalities (Pampalon, 2008). Many health policy initiatives, such as the development of cardiac rehabilitation programs, were put in place in order to promote heart healthy lifestyles. These programs are provided as a medical and educational solution to prevent, manage, and lower risks of developing complications due to cardiovascular diseases, yet participation rates are as low as 37% for eligible individuals (Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, 2013). By drawing chiefly on Pierre Bourdieu’s sociocultural theory of practices, this qualitative study aims to understand the social variation of lifestyles in the context of cardiac rehabilitation of two groups of men from contrasting socioeconomic conditions. Sixty in-depth interviews were conducted with francophone men (mean age of 56.5) from the Outaouais region (Québec, Canada) who have suffered from a cardiac event requiring hospitalization. A number of studies on cardiovascular health have indicated health and lifestyle disparities among the male population. In order to provide a new perspective, this specific study drew principally on the notion of social capital in order to provide a more complete understanding of the social variation of lifestyles in the context of cardiac rehabilitation, particularly the impact these socioeconomic differences have on the quality of participants’ social capital, and how it shapes lifestyles after a heart intervention The results of this study are presented in an article which compares lifestyles and cardiac rehabilitation practices on the basis of three concepts of social capital, – social cohesion, trust, and social support. Results suggests that socioeconomic conditions influence levels of social cohesion, trust, and the quality of social support provided by social networks in the context of cardiac rehabilitation. Despite the underprivileged participant’s awareness of normative health lifestyles, they also were constrained by socio-cultural barriers, which limited a heart-healthy lifestyle. 2015-03-27T17:05:56Z 2015-03-27T17:05:56Z 2015 2015 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32169 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-2849 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Social Capital
Pierre Bourdieu
Cardiac Rehabilitation
Heart Diseases
Social Support
Trust
Social Cohesion
Interviews
Qualitative
Social Variation
Lifestyles
spellingShingle Social Capital
Pierre Bourdieu
Cardiac Rehabilitation
Heart Diseases
Social Support
Trust
Social Cohesion
Interviews
Qualitative
Social Variation
Lifestyles
Diotte, Julie
Social Capital and Cardiac Rehabilitation. Social Variation of Lifestyles of Men from Contrasting Socioeconomic Groups
description Social inequalities in health have been well documented in the literature. Despite the universal health care system and detailed measures of health surveillance, socioeconomic disparities related to cardiovascular diseases (CVD) remain present and are predicted to increase due to growing socioeconomic inequalities (Pampalon, 2008). Many health policy initiatives, such as the development of cardiac rehabilitation programs, were put in place in order to promote heart healthy lifestyles. These programs are provided as a medical and educational solution to prevent, manage, and lower risks of developing complications due to cardiovascular diseases, yet participation rates are as low as 37% for eligible individuals (Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, 2013). By drawing chiefly on Pierre Bourdieu’s sociocultural theory of practices, this qualitative study aims to understand the social variation of lifestyles in the context of cardiac rehabilitation of two groups of men from contrasting socioeconomic conditions. Sixty in-depth interviews were conducted with francophone men (mean age of 56.5) from the Outaouais region (Québec, Canada) who have suffered from a cardiac event requiring hospitalization. A number of studies on cardiovascular health have indicated health and lifestyle disparities among the male population. In order to provide a new perspective, this specific study drew principally on the notion of social capital in order to provide a more complete understanding of the social variation of lifestyles in the context of cardiac rehabilitation, particularly the impact these socioeconomic differences have on the quality of participants’ social capital, and how it shapes lifestyles after a heart intervention The results of this study are presented in an article which compares lifestyles and cardiac rehabilitation practices on the basis of three concepts of social capital, – social cohesion, trust, and social support. Results suggests that socioeconomic conditions influence levels of social cohesion, trust, and the quality of social support provided by social networks in the context of cardiac rehabilitation. Despite the underprivileged participant’s awareness of normative health lifestyles, they also were constrained by socio-cultural barriers, which limited a heart-healthy lifestyle.
author2 Dumas, Alexandre
author_facet Dumas, Alexandre
Diotte, Julie
author Diotte, Julie
author_sort Diotte, Julie
title Social Capital and Cardiac Rehabilitation. Social Variation of Lifestyles of Men from Contrasting Socioeconomic Groups
title_short Social Capital and Cardiac Rehabilitation. Social Variation of Lifestyles of Men from Contrasting Socioeconomic Groups
title_full Social Capital and Cardiac Rehabilitation. Social Variation of Lifestyles of Men from Contrasting Socioeconomic Groups
title_fullStr Social Capital and Cardiac Rehabilitation. Social Variation of Lifestyles of Men from Contrasting Socioeconomic Groups
title_full_unstemmed Social Capital and Cardiac Rehabilitation. Social Variation of Lifestyles of Men from Contrasting Socioeconomic Groups
title_sort social capital and cardiac rehabilitation. social variation of lifestyles of men from contrasting socioeconomic groups
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32169
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-2849
work_keys_str_mv AT diottejulie socialcapitalandcardiacrehabilitationsocialvariationoflifestylesofmenfromcontrastingsocioeconomicgroups
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