This intuition is correct if you take mental health to highly correlate health in general.
Except for Ageing, and Tabagism (also called slow motion suicide), not having a deeply rewarding and intrincate social life is the most important factor determining your health.
“People with strong social relationships were 50 percent less likely to die
early than people without such support, the team at Brigham Young University
in Utah found.
They suggest that policymakers look at ways to help people maintain social
relationships as a way of keeping the population healthy.
“A lack of social relationships was equivalent to smoking up to 15 cigarettes
a day,” psychologist Julianne Holt-Lunstad, who led the study, said in a
telephone interview.
Her team conducted a meta-analysis of studies that examine social
relationships and their effects on health. They looked at 148 studies that
covered more than 308,000 people.
Having low levels of social interaction was equivalent to being an alcoholic,
was more harmful than not exercising and was twice as harmful as obesity.
Social relationships had a bigger impact on premature death than getting an
adult vaccine to prevent pneumonia, than taking drugs for high blood pressure
and far more important than exposure to air pollution, they found.
META--: Will someone Please create a way in which comments can use italicized text so I don’t have to do This to emphasize a word!
We use markdown. Click the “Help” link at the bottom right of the comment box. Use either asterices or underscores around a word or phrase that you wish to emphasise. Two of the same on each side for bold.
This intuition is correct if you take mental health to highly correlate health in general.
Except for Ageing, and Tabagism (also called slow motion suicide), not having a deeply rewarding and intrincate social life is the most important factor determining your health.
“People with strong social relationships were 50 percent less likely to die early than people without such support, the team at Brigham Young University in Utah found. They suggest that policymakers look at ways to help people maintain social relationships as a way of keeping the population healthy. “A lack of social relationships was equivalent to smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day,” psychologist Julianne Holt-Lunstad, who led the study, said in a telephone interview. Her team conducted a meta-analysis of studies that examine social relationships and their effects on health. They looked at 148 studies that covered more than 308,000 people.
Having low levels of social interaction was equivalent to being an alcoholic, was more harmful than not exercising and was twice as harmful as obesity. Social relationships had a bigger impact on premature death than getting an adult vaccine to prevent pneumonia, than taking drugs for high blood pressure and far more important than exposure to air pollution, they found.
Paper is here: http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.1000316
We use markdown. Click the “Help” link at the bottom right of the comment box. Use either asterices or underscores around a word or phrase that you wish to emphasise. Two of the same on each side for bold.