人际关系
背景(考古学)
透视图(图形)
功率(物理)
个人网络
个人生活
不平等
互惠的
业务
公共关系
社会心理学
社会学
心理学
政治学
法学
社会科学
计算机科学
数学分析
哲学
物理
生物
量子力学
古生物学
人工智能
语言学
数学
作者
Yang Shen,Xiwang Ke,Cheng Cheng,Yanjie Bian
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115968
摘要
Medical crowdfunding is an accessible alternative for individuals to meet their unaffordable health needs. This study explores the role of personal networks in medical crowdfunding performance from the perspective of tie strength and whether gender inequality persists in the returns of personal networks in this survival context, using bilateral data of both the ego and the alters collected from a large representative medical crowdfunding platform in China. It is found that kin ties play a fundamental and predominant role while pseudo-kin ties, being less strong than kin ties in terms of mutual sentiment and reciprocal obligations to help each other, play an accumulative role and are more influential in increasing crowdfunding performance, and neighbour and other role relations have the weakest effect and contribution. Importantly, women are not discriminated against when mobilizing personal networks for medical crowdfunding as they enjoy the same returns of most personal ties as men do.
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