Stand by Me: Social Ties and Health in Real-Time.

IF 3 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Socius Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-05-25 DOI:10.1177/23780231231171112
Alyssa Goldman, Erin York Cornwell
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Abstract

Sociological research has documented myriad associations between individuals' overall social connectedness and health, but rarely considers the shorter-term dynamics of social life that may underlie these associations. We examine how being with others ("social accompaniment") is associated with momentary experiences of symptoms, drawing smartphone-based ecological momentary assessments (N=12,720) collected from 342 older adults from the Chicago Health and Activity in Real Time study. We find that patterns of social accompaniment are distinct from global measures of social integration such as network size. Older adults who are in the company of a friend or neighbor are significantly less likely to experience momentary fatigue and stress, even after accounting for overall measures of social integration. These results suggest that social accompaniment has unique implications for short-term health outcomes. New theoretical perspectives and empirical analyses are needed to better understand the dynamic nature of everyday social accompaniment and its longer-term implications for well-being.

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支持我:实时的社会关系和健康。
社会学研究已经记录了个人整体社会联系与健康之间的无数关联,但很少考虑这些关联背后的短期社会生活动态。我们从芝加哥健康与活动实时研究的342名老年人中收集了基于智能手机的生态瞬时评估(N=12720),研究了与他人在一起(“社交陪伴”)与症状的瞬时体验之间的关系。我们发现,社会伴随模式与网络规模等全球社会融合指标不同。与朋友或邻居在一起的老年人,即使考虑到社会融合的整体衡量标准,也不太可能经历短暂的疲劳和压力。这些结果表明,社会陪伴对短期健康结果具有独特的影响。需要新的理论视角和实证分析来更好地理解日常社会陪伴的动态性质及其对幸福感的长期影响。
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来源期刊
Socius
Socius Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
6.70%
发文量
84
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊最新文献
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