Landless female peasants living in urban villages in China have poorer quality of life than males: results from a household study in the Yangtze River Delta region


Urbanization has accelerated in China, and a large amount of arable land has been transformed into urban land. Moreover, the number of landless peasants has continually increased.

Peasants lose not only their land, but also a series of rights and interests related with land. The problems of landless peasants have been long-standing; however, only a few studies have examined their health or quality of life (QOL).

This paper assesses the QOL of landless peasants in the Yangtze River Delta (YRD) region, analyzes gender differences, and explores health inequity.

Methods:
Data are derived from household samples in six urban villages of three cities (Nanjing, Hangzhou, and Yangzhou) in the YRD region (N = 1,500; the effective rate = 82.4%). This study uses the short version of World Health Organization Quality of Life questionnaire (WHOQOL-BREF) scale to measure the QOL of landless peasants, and performs confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and structural equation modeling (SEM) to analyze gender differences in QOL.Results and conclusionFirst, we use Analysis of Variance and Non-parametric Tests to test if the differences of mean value of testing generals have statistical significances.

Results shows significant differences occur between the impacts of different genders on the four domains of QOL (physical health, psychological health, social relationships, and environment). The internal reliability of the WHOQOL-BREF scale is good (Cronbach’s alpha 0.8), and the four domains of QOL are connected with each other.Second, scores in each QOL domain are commonly low, whereas the scores of females are much lower, indicating a poorer QOL than that of males.Third, results of the CFA of the QOL domains and their related observed variables indicate a good model fit.Fourth, results of the SEM imply that the order of importance of the four domains (psychological health (males = 26.74%, females = 27.17%); social relationships (males = 26.23%, females = 25.35%); environment (males = 25.70%, females = 24.40%); and physical health (males = 21.33%, females = 24.40%)) affecting QOL from high to low is the same for landless male and female peasants, whereas the proportion of importance is different between genders.

The results highlight the importance of government intervention to improve the QOL of Chinese landless peasants, ultimately reducing health inequity.

Author: Ying LiangShuqin Li
Credits/Source: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes 2014, 12:71

Published on: 2014-05-15

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