Jeon Sangha, Turiano Nicholas A, Charles Susan T
Department of Psychological Science, University of California, Irvine, California, USA.
Department of Psychology, Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2024 May 1;79(5). doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbae021.
More frequent engagement in social activity is often associated with better physical health outcomes. Yet, less is known about whether engagement in a greater variety of social activities such as a mix of volunteering and attending club meetings (social activity variety) is important for health. The current study assessed whether social activity variety relates to mortality risk after adjusting for social activity frequency, nonsocial activity frequency and variety, and sociodemographic covariates, and how this relationship varies depending on age.
Using data from the Health and Retirement Study, we included 5,017 adults aged 51 and older who completed questions about social activity participation in 2008 and whose mortality status was recorded up to 2019. We also examined whether age moderated the relationship between social activity variety and mortality risk.
Cox proportional hazard model analyses revealed that those with higher activity variety in social activities were more likely to survive over the following 11 years than those with low social activity variety. Moreover, age moderation indicated that the association between social activity variety with mortality risk was stronger among the oldest adults.
Findings suggest that a greater variety of social activities is linked to mortality risk even after adjusting for social activity frequency, nonsocial activities, and health status across adulthood.
更频繁地参与社交活动通常与更好的身体健康结果相关。然而,对于参与更多种类的社交活动,如志愿服务和参加俱乐部会议的组合(社交活动多样性)对健康是否重要,人们了解较少。本研究评估了在调整社交活动频率、非社交活动频率和多样性以及社会人口统计学协变量后,社交活动多样性是否与死亡风险相关,以及这种关系如何随年龄变化。
利用健康与退休研究的数据,我们纳入了5017名51岁及以上的成年人,他们在2008年完成了关于社交活动参与情况的问题,并且其死亡状态记录至2019年。我们还研究了年龄是否调节了社交活动多样性与死亡风险之间的关系。
Cox比例风险模型分析显示,社交活动多样性较高的人在接下来的11年中比社交活动多样性较低的人更有可能存活。此外,年龄调节表明,社交活动多样性与死亡风险之间的关联在最年长的成年人中更强。
研究结果表明,即使在调整了整个成年期的社交活动频率、非社交活动和健康状况后,更多样化的社交活动仍与死亡风险相关。