Yang Yang Claire, Boen Courtney, Gerken Karen, Li Ting, Schorpp Kristen, Harris Kathleen Mullan
Department of Sociology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599; Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27516; Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27514;
Department of Sociology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599; Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27516;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Jan 19;113(3):578-83. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1511085112. Epub 2016 Jan 4.
Two decades of research indicate causal associations between social relationships and mortality, but important questions remain as to how social relationships affect health, when effects emerge, and how long they last. Drawing on data from four nationally representative longitudinal samples of the US population, we implemented an innovative life course design to assess the prospective association of both structural and functional dimensions of social relationships (social integration, social support, and social strain) with objectively measured biomarkers of physical health (C-reactive protein, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, waist circumference, and body mass index) within each life stage, including adolescence and young, middle, and late adulthood, and compare such associations across life stages. We found that a higher degree of social integration was associated with lower risk of physiological dysregulation in a dose-response manner in both early and later life. Conversely, lack of social connections was associated with vastly elevated risk in specific life stages. For example, social isolation increased the risk of inflammation by the same magnitude as physical inactivity in adolescence, and the effect of social isolation on hypertension exceeded that of clinical risk factors such as diabetes in old age. Analyses of multiple dimensions of social relationships within multiple samples across the life course produced consistent and robust associations with health. Physiological impacts of structural and functional dimensions of social relationships emerge uniquely in adolescence and midlife and persist into old age.
二十年的研究表明社会关系与死亡率之间存在因果关联,但关于社会关系如何影响健康、影响何时出现以及持续多久等重要问题依然存在。利用来自美国人口的四个具有全国代表性的纵向样本的数据,我们采用了一种创新的生命历程设计,以评估社会关系的结构和功能维度(社会融合、社会支持和社会压力)与每个生命阶段(包括青春期、青年、中年和老年)客观测量的身体健康生物标志物(C反应蛋白、收缩压和舒张压、腰围和体重指数)之间的前瞻性关联,并比较不同生命阶段之间的这种关联。我们发现,在生命早期和后期,较高程度的社会融合均以剂量反应方式与较低的生理失调风险相关联。相反,缺乏社会联系在特定生命阶段与风险大幅升高相关。例如,社会孤立在青春期增加炎症风险的程度与缺乏身体活动相当,而社会孤立对高血压的影响在老年时超过了糖尿病等临床风险因素。对生命历程中多个样本的社会关系多个维度进行的分析产生了与健康一致且有力的关联。社会关系的结构和功能维度对生理的影响在青春期和中年独特地显现,并持续到老年。