Sugisawa H, Liang J, Liu X
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology.
J Gerontol. 1994 Jan;49(1):S3-13. doi: 10.1093/geronj/49.1.s3.
This study examined the effects of social networks and social support on the mortality of a national probability sample of 2,200 elderly Japanese persons during a three-year period. The direct and indirect effects of social relationships were assessed by using hazard rate models in conjunction with ordinary least squares regressions. Among the five measures of social relationships, social participation is shown to have a strong impact on mortality, and this effect remains statistically significant when other factors are considered. Social participation, social support, and feelings of loneliness are found to have indirect effects on the mortality of the Japanese elders through their linkages with chronic diseases, functional status, and self-rated health. On the other hand, marital status and social contacts are not shown to have statistically significant effects on the risk of dying, either directly or indirectly.
本研究调查了社交网络和社会支持对2200名日本老年人全国概率样本在三年期间死亡率的影响。通过使用风险率模型结合普通最小二乘法回归来评估社会关系的直接和间接影响。在社会关系的五项衡量指标中,社会参与对死亡率有强烈影响,并且在考虑其他因素时,这种影响在统计上仍然显著。研究发现,社会参与、社会支持和孤独感通过与慢性病、功能状态和自评健康的联系,对日本老年人的死亡率产生间接影响。另一方面,婚姻状况和社会交往无论是直接还是间接,对死亡风险均未显示出具有统计学意义的影响。