Objective The family is a particular vehicle for everyone's life and development. To better understand the impact of family interactions on an individual's health risk, this study examined family interaction between family relationships, psychological capital, and health risk, providing suggestions for people's health promotion. Methods A total of 17543 participants were included in this study, the data obtained came from the China Family Panel Studies' sixth wave (2019 ~ 2020), and the collected data were analyzed using path analysis to test the influence mechanism of family interactions on an individual's health risk. Result Family Interaction is significantly negatively correlated with health risk; it indicates that family interaction is a protective factor that influences people's mental and physical health. Family relationships and psychological capital are chain mediators between family interaction and health risk. Conclusions Findings highlight the importance of considering family interactions as an entry point for future health promotion for people; our data suggest that policymakers should encourage individuals to maintain health outcomes through positive family interactions.
Supplemental Online MaterialTable S1. A full list of keywords used for the search in the Sociology journals and selected general social science journals of CSSCI (in "Article title" and "Keywords") huanjing (environment), shengtai (ecology), ziran (nature), ziyuan (resource), kechixu (sustainable/sustainability), qihou bianhua (climate change), quanqiu biannuan (global warming), tanpaifang (carbon emission), qiwen (temperature), relang (heat wave), gongdi beiju (tragedy of commons), kongqi (air), heliu (river), haiyang (ocean), turang (soil), mucai (timber), famu (logging), kuangcang (mineral reserve), kuangye (mining industry), kuangchan (mineral product), caikuang (mining), nengyuan (energy), tianranqi (natural gas), yeyanqi (shale gas), shengwu ranliao (biofuel), senlin (forest), zaolin (forestation), yehuo (wildfire), linye huozai (wildland fire), yuye (fishery), yuchang (fishing ground), yesheng shengwu (wildlife), dongwu (animal), zhiwu (plant), shengwu duoyangxing (biodiversity), binwei wuzhong (endangered species), ruqin wuzhong (invasive species), caoyuan (grassland), caochang (meadow), muchang (rangeland), shidi (wetland), zhaozedi (marshland), jingguan (landscape), qixidi (habitat), shengjing (niche), liuyu (watershed), tudi (land), laji (garbage), shamohua (desertification), huangmohua (harsh desertification), fuyingyanghua (eutrophication), difang yilian (place attachment), difang yishi (place awareness), diyugan (sense of place), diyu qingjie (place emotion), shequ yilian (community attachment), huwai xiuxian (outdoor recreation), huwai yundong (outdoor activity), jishu zaihai (technological hazard), jishu zainan (technological disaster), zainan yanjiu (disaster research), ganhan (drought), hongshui (flood), shiyou xielou (oil spill), jufeng (hurricane), fengbao (windstorm), baofeng (violent storm), leiyu (thunderstorm), longjuanfeng (tornado), xuanfeng (cyclone), dizhen (earthquake), wuran (pollution), huishou (recycling), feiwu chuli (waste treatment), feiwu chuzhi (waste disposal), hefeiwu (nuclear waste), hedian (nuclear power), heneng (nuclear energy), renlei huomian (human exemption), xinshehui yundong (new social movement), shijie gongmin shehui (world civil society), houwuzhi (postmaterialism), shengchan paobuji (treadmill of production), xiaofei paobuji (treadmill of consumption), daixie duanlie (metabolic rift), daixie liehen (metabolic rift), shengwuquan (biosphere), huanbao (environmentalism), baohuqu (protected area), guojia gongyuan (national park), xiangtu zhishi (indigenous knowledge), tuzhu zhishi (indigenous knowledge), chuantong zhishi (traditional knowledge), bendi zhishi (local knowledge), difang zhishi (local knowledge) Notes: These keyword combinations were developed on the basis of those used for an earlier bibliometric analysis of the English environmental and resource sociology literature (see Table 1 in Qin et al. [2020]). For some article searches involving the terms "huanjing (environment)," "ziyuan (resource)," "shengtai (ecology)," and "ziran (nature)," we also used th...
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