Ward Mark, May Peter, Normand Charles, Kenny Rose Anne, Nolan Anne
The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA), Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
Centre for Health Policy and Management, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
Age Ageing. 2021 Jun 28;50(4):1329-1335. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afab004.
Social distancing and similar measures in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic have greatly increased loneliness and social isolation among older adults. Understanding the association between loneliness and mortality is therefore critically important. We examined whether combinations of loneliness and social isolation, using a metric named social asymmetry, was associated with increased mortality risk.
The sample was derived from participants in The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing, a nationally representative sample of community-dwelling older adults aged ≥50. Survey data were linked to official death registration records. Cox proportional hazards regressions and competing risk survival analyses were used to examine the association between social asymmetry and all-cause and cause-specific mortality.
Of four social asymmetry groups, concordant low lonely (low loneliness, low isolation) included 35.5% of participants; 26.4% were concordant high lonely (high loneliness, high isolation); 19.2% were discordant robust (low loneliness, high isolation) and 18.9% discordant susceptible (high loneliness, low isolation). The concordant high lonely (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.43, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.09-1.87) and discordant robust (HR = 1.37, 95% CI: 1.04-1.81) groups had an increased mortality risk compared to those in the concordant low lonely group. The concordant high lonely group had an increased risk of mortality due to diseases of the circulatory system (sub-distribution hazard ratio = 1.52, 95% CI: 1.03-2.25).
We found that social asymmetry predicted mortality over a 7-year follow-up period. Our results confirm that a mismatch between subjective loneliness and objective social isolation, as well as the combination of loneliness and social isolation, were associated with an increased all-cause mortality risk.
为应对2019年冠状病毒病疫情而采取的社交距离措施及类似举措,极大地加剧了老年人的孤独感和社会隔离状态。因此,了解孤独感与死亡率之间的关联至关重要。我们使用一种名为社会不对称性的指标,研究孤独感与社会隔离的组合是否与死亡率风险增加相关。
样本来自爱尔兰纵向老龄化研究的参与者,这是一个具有全国代表性的50岁及以上社区居住老年人样本。调查数据与官方死亡登记记录相链接。采用Cox比例风险回归和竞争风险生存分析,研究社会不对称性与全因死亡率及特定病因死亡率之间的关联。
在四个社会不对称性组中,一致低孤独组(低孤独感、低隔离)占参与者的35.5%;26.4%为一致高孤独组(高孤独感、高隔离);19.2%为不一致强健组(低孤独感、高隔离),18.9%为不一致易感组(高孤独感、低隔离)。与一致低孤独组相比,一致高孤独组(风险比[HR]=1.43,95%置信区间[CI]:1.09 - 1.87)和不一致强健组(HR = 1.37,95% CI:1.04 - 1.81)的死亡率风险增加。一致高孤独组因循环系统疾病导致的死亡风险增加(亚分布风险比 = 1.52,95% CI:1.03 - 2.25)。
我们发现,在7年的随访期内,社会不对称性可预测死亡率。我们的结果证实,主观孤独感与客观社会隔离之间的不匹配,以及孤独感与社会隔离的组合,均与全因死亡率风险增加相关。