School of Aging Studies, University of South Florida, Tampa, USA.
California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute, San Francisco and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
J Psychosom Res. 2023 Sep;172:111434. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2023.111434. Epub 2023 Jul 4.
This study examined whether social activity diversity, a novel concept indicating an active social lifestyle, is associated with lower subsequent loneliness, and decreased loneliness is further associated with less chronic pain over time.
2528 adults from the Midlife in the United States Study (M = 54 yrs) provided data at baseline (2004-2009) and 9 years later. Social activity diversity was operationalized by Shannon's entropy that captures the variety and evenness of engagement across 13 social activities (0-1). Participants reported feelings of loneliness (1-5), presence of any chronic pain (yes/no), the degree of chronic pain-related interference (0-10), and the number of chronic pain locations. Indirect associations of social activity diversity with chronic pain through loneliness were evaluated, adjusting for sociodemographics, living alone, and chronic conditions.
Higher social activity diversity at baseline (B = -0.21, 95%CI = [-0.41, -0.02]) and an increase in social activity diversity over time (B = -0.24, 95%CI = [-0.42, -0.06]) were associated with lower loneliness 9 years later. An increase in loneliness was associated with 24% higher risk of any chronic pain (95%CI = [1.11, 1.38]), greater chronic pain-related interference (B = 0.36, 95%CI = [0.14, 0.58]), and 17% increase in the number of chronic pain locations (95%CI = [1.10, 1.25]) at the follow-up, after controlling for corresponding chronic pain at baseline and covariates. Social activity diversity was not directly was associated with chronic pain, but there were indirect associations through its association with loneliness.
Diversity in social life may be associated with decreased loneliness, which in turn, may be associated with less chronic pain, two of the prevalent concerns in adulthood.
本研究旨在探讨社会活动多样性(一种活跃社交生活方式的新概念)是否与较低的后续孤独感相关,以及孤独感的降低是否与随时间推移的慢性疼痛减少有关。
来自美国中年研究(M=54 岁)的 2528 名成年人在基线(2004-2009 年)和 9 年后提供了数据。社会活动多样性通过香农熵来操作化,该熵捕捉了 13 项社会活动(0-1)中的参与度的多样性和均匀性。参与者报告了孤独感(1-5)、是否存在任何慢性疼痛(是/否)、慢性疼痛相关干扰的程度(0-10)以及慢性疼痛部位的数量。通过孤独感评估了社会活动多样性与慢性疼痛之间的间接关联,并调整了社会人口统计学、独居和慢性疾病的因素。
基线时较高的社会活动多样性(B=-0.21,95%CI=[-0.41,-0.02])和随时间推移的社会活动多样性增加(B=-0.24,95%CI=[-0.42,-0.06])与 9 年后的孤独感降低相关。孤独感的增加与任何慢性疼痛的风险增加 24%相关(95%CI=[1.11,1.38])、慢性疼痛相关干扰增加(B=0.36,95%CI=[0.14,0.58])以及慢性疼痛部位的数量增加 17%(95%CI=[1.10,1.25]),这些关联在控制基线时的相应慢性疼痛和协变量后仍然存在。社会活动多样性与慢性疼痛没有直接关联,但通过与孤独感的关联存在间接关联。
社交生活的多样性可能与孤独感降低有关,而孤独感的降低又可能与成年期常见的慢性疼痛减少有关。