Trust in Your Neighbors Could Benefit Your Health and America
Here’s an easy way to improve your health: trust your neighbors. A 2011 study from the University of Missouri showed that increasing trust in neighbors is associated with better self-reported health.
“I examined the idea of
‘relative position,’ or where one fits into the income distribution in their
local community, as it applies to both trust of neighbors and self-rated
health,” said Eileen Bjornstrom, an assistant professor of sociology at Mizzou in 2011. “Because human beings engage in interpersonal comparisons
in order to gauge individual characteristics, it has been suggested that a low
relative position, or feeling that you are below another person financially,
leads to stress and negative emotions such as shame, hostility and distrust,
and that health suffers as a consequence. While most people aren’t aware of how
trust impacts them, results indicated that trust was a factor in a person’s
overall health.”
In the study, Bjornstrom
examined the 2001 Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey. Contrary to
expectations, she found that respondents with a higher income, relative to
their community, were more likely to distrust their neighbors.
Simultaneously, while taking into account factors such as level of education,
income, and age, people who reported that “their neighbors can be trusted” also
reported better health on average.
“I was surprised about
the direction in which relative position was linked to distrust. If affluent
individuals are less likely to trust their poorer neighbors, it could be
beneficial to attempt to overcome some of the distrust that leads to poor
health,” Bjornstrom said. “It is possible that shared community resources that
promote interaction, such as sidewalks and parks, could help bridge the
neighborhood trust gap, and also promote health and well-being. Residents of
all economic statuses might then benefit if community cohesion was increased.
Additional research can address those questions.”
While there was not a
direct link between low relative position among neighbors and better health,
Bjornstrom believes that further study needs to occur in different contexts.
She believes research on relative position in the workplace or among
social networks would provide greater insight.
“For example, relative
position at work could matter for health because it might be associated with
autonomy or other benefits,” Bjornstrom said.
Bjornstrom’s study, “The
Neighborhood Context of Relative Position, Trust and Self-Rated Health,” appears
in the journal Social Science & Medicine.
A 2019 study by Pew confirmed what many have suspected: American's trust of each other and institutions is on the decline.
Trust is an essential elixir for public life and neighborly relations, and when Americans think about trust these days, they worry. Two-thirds of adults think other Americans have little or no confidence in the federal government. Majorities believe the public’s confidence in the U.S. government and in each other is shrinking, and most believe a shortage of trust in government and in other citizens makes it harder to solve some of the nation’s key problems.
As a result, many think it is necessary to clean up the trust environment: 68% say it is very important to repair the public’s level of confidence in the federal government, and 58% say the same about improving confidence in fellow Americans.
The disposition of U.S. adults to trust, or not to trust, each other is connected with their thinking about all manner of issues. For instance, those who are less trusting in the interpersonal sphere also tend to be less trusting of institutions, less sure their fellow citizens will act in ways that are good for civic life and less confident that trust levels can rise in the future.
What this Mizzou study and other research finds, however, is that trust right where we live, in our neighborhoods, holds the key to our trust of other institutions. It is all local.
Taking action to create trust is one of my Engaged Neighbor Principles and a key reason for working in your neighborhood to create positive relationships. The Engaged Neighbor Pledge can be found at http://nomoregoodneighbors.com.
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