 |
| Feeling lonely and isolated may be harmful
to one's health, a new study reveals. (file
photo) |
Beijing, March 30 (Xinhuanet)-- In addition to
obesity and lack of exercise, a recent study has found that
loneliness also poses a potential risk factor for hypertension.
The new research, conducted by scientists at the
Center for Cognitive and Social Neuroscience at the University of
Chicago, shows that loneliness can add 30 points to a blood pressure
reading for adults over the age of 50.
The researchers found that lonely older people had
blood pressure readings that were as much as 30 points higher than others --
even after other negative emotive states, like sadness, stress or hostility,
were taken into account.
A 30-point spread in blood pressure is equal to the
difference between a normal diastolic pressure of 120 mm/Hg and stage 1
hypertension, measured at 150 mm/Hg, the researchers pointed out.
What's more, the effect of loneliness in increasing
hypertension appeared to get stronger with age, and the effect of
loneliness on blood pressure in older individuals is similar to that of physical
risk factors long targeted by physicians, such as obesity or sedentary
lifestyles. the team found.
"The take-home message is that feelings of loneliness
are a health risk, in that the lonelier you are, the higher your blood pressure.
And we know that high blood pressure has all kinds of negative consequences,"
said lead researcher Louise Hawkley, whose team published its findings in
the April issue of Psychology and Aging.
Hawkley's study was inspired by previous work,
published in 2002, that discovered profound and lingering effects of loneliness
on the blood pressure of undergraduate college students.
In this latest study, Hawkley's group interviewed 229
people aged 50 to 68 years of age. They used standard questionnaires to
determine each participant's perceived level of loneliness, as well as other
psychosocial and cardiovascular risk factors.
If loneliness can raise blood pressure, then the
solution seems easy: strengthen existing relationships and make new ones. But
Hawkley -- who has studied loneliness for years -- said it's usually not that
simple.
"Remember, people can feel lonely even if they are
with a lot of people," she said. "You can think of Marilyn Monroe or Princess
Diana -- there was certainly nothing lacking in their social lives, yet they
claimed to have felt intensely lonely."
"They may want to go out and make friends, and yet
they have a nagging lack of trust with whomever they want to interact with, or
they may feel hostile. So they end up behaving in ways that force the potential
partner away," Hawkley said.
Targeted interventions that break that cycle might
help change things, she said. Enditem
(Agencies)
|