The New Zealand General Social Survey 2010 Philip Walker and Scott Ussher 1st December 2011

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The New Zealand General Social Survey 2010

Philip Walker and Scott Ussher

1st December 2011

NZGSS 2010 – results and opportunities

• NZGSS is a multi-dimensional survey of wellbeing…

• Researchers and policy makers can access NZGSS unit record data directly though the NZGSS CURF which is released today

Products using GSS 2008 CURF• Measuring Social Inclusion: People with

experience of mental distress and addiction (Mental Health Commission, September 2011)

• Maori Life Satisfaction Fact sheet (Te Puni Kokiri, February 2011).

• Benefits of tertiary certificates and diplomas – exploring economic and social outcomes (Ministry of Education, May 2010)

• Second survey in the series (first in 2008)• Achieved samples of more than 8,000

individuals • More than 400 variables covering twelve life

domains plus demographics and overall life satisfaction.

NZGSS 2010

Offers unique perspective

• includes objective and subjective measures across a wide range of social and economic outcomes

• shows the distribution of well being outcomes across population groupings.

Cross-domain analysis

• “Developments in one domain of quality of life affect other domains”

• “The consequences for quality of life of having multiple disadvantages far exceed the sum of their individual effects”

Stiglitz et al

Wellbeing and social connectedness

• Social connectedness has been identified as one of the strongest predictors of peoples’ subjective wellbeing

• Includes:–being partnered–contact with family and friends–volunteering

The association between social isolation and health

• Research questions– Is there an association between isolation

and physical and mental health?– Do these associations remain after

adjusting for covariate factors?– What other factors have an adjusted

association with isolation?

Framework for social isolation and health

Social isolation

Health

Mental health

Physical health

Social

Living alone

Work/study

Economic

Standard of living

Demographic

Age

Gender

Ethnicity

GSS variablesFramework variable GSS domain

Social isolation Social connectedness

Physical health Health

Mental health Health

Living alone Core household

Work/study Paid workKnowledge and skills

Standard of living Economic standard of living

Age Core person

Gender Core person

Ethnicity Core person

Social isolation by mental health

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90Percent

Poor mental health Good mental health

Social isolation by physical health

-

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80 Percent

Poor physical health Good physical health

Social isolation by age

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42 45 48 51 54 57 60 63 66 69 72 75 78 81 84 87 90

Percent

Other findings

• Other people more likely to feel socially isolated are:– Females– People living alone– People living in economic hardship– Asian and Māori– Unemployed

Multivariate analysis

• Findings from an initial multivariate analysis– Association with mental health significant– Association with physical health is not– Other significant factors

• Economic standard of living• Age• Living alone• Asian

How to apply for a CURF

• Applications for a CURF can be made through Statistics NZ website

• www.stats.govt.nz (search micro data)

• Or you can talk to us after the seminar!

CURF costs

• For universities in the CONZUL agreement the CURF is free.

• For everyone else the costs are:• Assessment and Approval admin fee........$405• User set-up fee.......................................$30• Project support charge.............................$7.50 per

month for the duration of the project.

Questions?

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