Authors
Louis Tay, Kenneth Tan, Ed Diener, Elizabeth Gonzalez
Publication date
2013/3
Source
Applied Psychology: Health and Well‐Being
Volume
5
Issue
1
Pages
28-78
Description
The primary goal of this paper is to summarise current evidence on social relations and health, specifically how social integration and social support are related to health behaviors and health outcomes, using results from published reviews. Our analysis revealed that social relations are beneficial for health behaviors such as chronic illness self‐management and decreased suicidal tendency. The salutary effects of general measures of social relations (e.g. being validated, being cared for, etc.) on health behaviors (e.g. healthy diet, physical activity, smoking, alcohol abuse) are weaker, but specific measures of social relations targeting corresponding health behaviors are more predictive. There is growing evidence that social relations are predictive of mortality and cardiovascular disease, and social relations play an equally protective role against both the incidence and progression of cardiovascular disease. On the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
L Tay, K Tan, E Diener, E Gonzalez - Applied Psychology: Health and Well‐Being, 2013