A Longitudinal Investigation of the Association between Stroke and Loneliness

Emily C Willroth, Payton D Rule, Eileen K Graham, Marjorie L Nicholas, Robin Hattori, Tess Thompson, Lisa Tabor Connor
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Abstract

Objective The present research examined associations between stroke and long-term trajectories of loneliness. Methods We conducted secondary analyses in three large representative panel studies of adults 50 years and older in the U.S., Europe, and Israel: the English Longitudinal Study of Aging (ELSA; analytic N=14,992); the Survey of Health, Aging, and Retirement in Europe (SHARE; analytic N=103,782); and the Health and Retirement Study (HRS; analytic N=22,179) .Within each sample, we used discontinuous growth curve modeling to estimate loneliness trajectories across adulthood, and the impact of stroke on loneliness trajectories. Results Across all three samples, participants who experienced stroke reported higher levels of loneliness relative to participants who did not experience stroke. In ELSA and HRS (but not SHARE), loneliness levels were higher after stroke onset relative to before stroke onset. Discussion This research adds to a growing body of evidence demonstrating elevated loneliness among stroke survivors and highlights the need for interventions to increase social connectedness after stroke.
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中风与孤独之间关系的纵向调查
目的 本研究探讨了中风与长期孤独感轨迹之间的关系。方法 我们对美国、欧洲和以色列的三项大型 50 岁及以上成年人代表性小组研究进行了二次分析、在每个样本中,我们使用不连续增长曲线模型来估计整个成年期的孤独感轨迹,以及中风对孤独感轨迹的影响。结果 在所有三个样本中,经历过中风的参与者与未经历过中风的参与者相比,孤独程度更高。在 ELSA 和 HRS(而非 SHARE)中,中风发生后的孤独感水平高于中风发生前。讨论 这项研究为越来越多的证据表明中风幸存者的孤独感升高提供了补充,并强调了采取干预措施以增加中风后社会联系的必要性。
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