all countries of the world on the basis of different health indicators (see, e.g.,
Mackenbach et al., 2018; Marmot, 2005).
However, the sentence does not ask about your own income, but about the
income of your friends. Is this information really meaningful? Does it really make
a difference to your own health which friends you have, who you surround yourself
with in your everyday life and what social position these people have?
In scientific terms, this sentence establishes a connection between the social
position of actors in a person's network of relationships and their own health behavior,
morbidity, and mortality. The information about the social status of a person's
friends-they may also be family members, colleagues, neighbors, or other more
distant acquaintances-is thus intended to provide us with conclusions about health
behavior, susceptibility to certain diseases and life expectancy, and possibly about
stratum-specific differences in health. If family members live together and share a
common household, it is likely that they will have similar health behavior, health risks
and stresses, and influences on life expectancy and hereditary diseases. But do people
from an individual's wider circle of friends and acquaintances also have an influence
on their own health?What new perspectives and insights in connection with health and
health inequality can the examination of social relationships yield?
This question will be addressed in the contributions to this anthology. The authors
ask not only whether individual social relationships (such as a friend who smokes
and encourages others to smoke) have an influence on individual health, but also the
interaction within one's own social network. Is someone's health or health behavior
more influenced by people who are similar or dissimilar? In short, the contributions
in this volume ask whether the structure of social relationships-the social networks
in which we are all embedded in our perception, thinking, and acting-has an
influence on us in that we are more likely to feel psychologically distressed, fall
ill, or die earlier than others. This also raises the question of whether the study of
social networks and the occupation with sociological and now interdisciplinary
network research can contribute to understanding and explaining health inequalities.
This anthology is the result of several years of collaboration between researchers
from different disciplines (sociology, medical sociology, psychology, public health,
education, health sciences) with different theoretical and methodological orientations.
The collaboration has been funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) as the
Scientific Network "Social Networks and Health Inequalities (SoNegU)" for a period
of four years since 2016. The aims of the network were (1) to make sociological
network research better known, especially in the German-speaking health research
community, and (2) to make the network perspective fertile for the explanation of
health inequalities. The aim of this book is to present the current state of research,
identify research needs, and point out perspectives for future research.
This introduction aims to show that the inclusion of the network.