Deakin University
Browse
berk-socialisolation-2021.pdf (6.57 MB)

Social isolation, social support and loneliness as predictors of cardiovascular disease incidence and mortality

Download (6.57 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2021-12-01, 00:00 authored by R Freak-Poli, J Ryan, J T Neumann, A Tonkin, C M Reid, R L Woods, M Nelson, N Stocks, Michael BerkMichael Berk, J J McNeil, C Britt, A J Owen
Abstract
Background
Poor social health is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Recent research suggests that different social health domains should be considered separately as the implications for health and possible interventions may differ.

Aim
To assess social isolation, low social support and loneliness as predictors of CVD.

Methods
Secondary analysis of 11,486 community-dwelling, Australians, aged 70 years and over, free of CVD, dementia, or significant physical disability, from the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) trial. Social isolation, social support (Revised Lubben Social Network Scale), and loneliness were assessed as predictors of CVD using Cox proportional-hazard regression. CVD events included fatal CVD, heart failure hospitalization, myocardial infarction and stroke. Analyses were adjusted for established CVD risk factors.

Results
Individuals with poor social health were 42 % more likely to develop CVD (p = 0.01) and twice as likely to die from CVD (p = 0.02) over a median 4.5 years follow-up. Interaction effects indicated that poorer social health more strongly predicted CVD in smokers (HR 4.83, p = 0.001, p-interaction = 0.01), major city dwellers (HR 1.94, p < 0.001, p-interaction=0.03), and younger older adults (70-75 years; HR 2.12, p < 0.001, p-interaction = 0.01). Social isolation (HR 1.66, p = 0.04) and low social support (HR 2.05, p = 0.002), but not loneliness (HR 1.4, p = 0.1), predicted incident CVD. All measures of poor social health predicted ischemic stroke (HR 1.73 to 3.16).

Conclusions
Among healthy older adults, social isolation and low social support may be more important than loneliness as cardiovascular risk factors. Social health domains should be considered in future CVD risk prediction models.

History

Journal

BMC Geriatrics

Volume

21

Issue

1

Article number

ARTN 711

Pagination

1 - 14

Publisher

BMC

Location

London, Eng

ISSN

1471-2318

eISSN

1471-2318

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal