Do Loneliness and Social Isolation Predict Mortality Because of Hazardous Drinking?

IF 1 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology Pub Date : 2021-12-01 DOI:10.1521/jscp.2021.40.6.508
Jussi Tanskanen, Sarah N. Arpin, Cynthia C. Mohr
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Abstract

Introduction: Subjective feelings of loneliness and objective social isolation have been consistently connected with ill-health and mortality, though little work has empirically examined the mechanisms explaining the adverse effects. This study examines whether alcohol consumption explains the connection of loneliness and social isolation on mortality in different age and gender groups. Methods: The sample comprised a representative 1994 Finnish sample (n = 8,650) matched with 22-year follow-up mortality data. A multigroup path analysis with discrete survival time analyses was conducted. Results: There were unique differences in the associations between loneliness, social isolation, alcohol consumption, and mortality based on age and gender groups. Loneliness and particularly social isolation predicted mortality partly through subjective intoxication for women under 40 and men 40–65. Discussion: Loneliness and social isolation are associated with mortality, partly through subjective intoxication. Interventions targeted at reducing loneliness and social isolation may help address underlying causes of excess alcohol consumption and mortality.
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孤独和社会孤立是否能预测危险饮酒导致的死亡率?
引言:主观的孤独感和客观的社会孤立感一直与健康不良和死亡率有关,尽管很少有工作对解释不良影响的机制进行实证研究。这项研究考察了饮酒是否可以解释不同年龄和性别群体中孤独和社会孤立与死亡率的联系。方法:该样本包括一个具有代表性的1994年芬兰样本(n=8650),与22年的随访死亡率数据相匹配。采用离散生存时间分析进行多组路径分析。结果:基于年龄和性别组,孤独感、社交孤立、饮酒和死亡率之间的关联存在独特差异。对于40岁以下的女性和40-65岁的男性来说,孤独和特别是社会孤立在一定程度上通过主观醉酒预测了死亡率。讨论:孤独和社会孤立与死亡率有关,部分原因是主观醉酒。旨在减少孤独感和社交孤立的干预措施可能有助于解决过量饮酒和死亡的根本原因。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: This journal is devoted to the application of theory and research from social psychology toward the better understanding of human adaptation and adjustment, including both the alleviation of psychological problems and distress (e.g., psychopathology) and the enhancement of psychological well-being among the psychologically healthy. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to) traditionally defined psychopathology (e.g., depression), common emotional and behavioral problems in living (e.g., conflicts in close relationships), the enhancement of subjective well-being, and the processes of psychological change in everyday life (e.g., self-regulation) and professional settings (e.g., psychotherapy and counseling). Articles reporting the results of theory-driven empirical research are given priority, but theoretical articles, review articles, clinical case studies, and essays on professional issues are also welcome. Articles describing the development of new scales (personality or otherwise) or the revision of existing scales are not appropriate for this journal.
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