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Loneliness Harms Health
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
Feeling a connection to others is a
critical component of a person’s mental and physical health.
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New studies
show that a sense of rejection or isolation disrupts not
only will power and perseverance, but also key cellular
processes deep within the human body.
Chronic loneliness belongs
among health risk factors such as smoking, obesity or lack
of exercise.
Feeling connected to others
is vital to a person’s mental well-being, as well as
physical health, research at the University of Chicago
shows.
The studies, reported in a
new book, Loneliness: Human Nature and the Need for Social
Connection, show that a sense of rejection or |
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isolation disrupts not
only abilities, will power and perseverance, but also
key cellular processes deep within the human body.
The findings suggest
that chronic loneliness belongs among health risk
factors such as smoking, obesity or lack of exercise,
according to lead author John Cacioppo, the Tiffany &
Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor in
Psychology at the University.
“Loneliness not only
alters behavior, but loneliness is related to greater
resistance to blood flow through your cardiovascular
system,” Cacioppo said. |
“Loneliness leads to higher rises
in morning levels of the stress hormone cortisol, altered gene
expression in immune cells, poorer immune function, higher blood
pressure and an increased level of depression.
Loneliness also is related to
difficulty getting a deep sleep and a faster progression of
Alzheimer’s disease, said Cacioppo.
One of the founders of a new
discipline called social neuroscience, Cacioppo used functional
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) brain scans and advanced
scientific techniques to document the roles of loneliness and social
connection as central regulatory mechanisms in human physiology and
behavior.
The authors traced the need for
connection to its evolutionary roots. In order to survive, humans
needed to bond to rear their children. In order to flourish, they
needed to extend their altruistic and cooperative impulses beyond
narrow self-interest and immediate kin. But in the environment of
evolutionary adaptation, the only real safety was in numbers.
Just as physical pain is a prompt
to change behavior (such as moving a finger away from the fire),
loneliness evolved as a prompt to action, signaling an ancestral
need to repair the social bonds. Feelings of loneliness take a
variety of forms, Cacioppo said.
“There are three core dimensions to
feeling lonely—intimate isolation, which comes from not having
anyone in your life you feel affirms who you are; relational
isolation, which comes from not having face-to-face contacts that
are rewarding; and collective isolation, which comes from not
feeling that you’re part of a group or collective beyond individual
existence,” he said.
It is not solitude or physical
isolation itself, but rather the subjective sense of isolation that
Cacioppo’s work shows to be so profoundly disruptive. Yet, outward
circumstances such as moving to a new community or losing an
intimate partner can trigger loneliness. And as the authors make
clear, today’s culture is not always conducive to promoting strong
social bonds.
The problem of social isolation
will likely grow as conventional societal structures fade. The
average household size is decreasing, and by 2010, 31 million
Americans—roughly 10 percent of the population—will live alone.
Sociologists also have found that people report significantly fewer
close friends and confidants than those a generation ago.
Cacioppo and Patrick also
demonstrate how loneliness creates a feedback loop that reinforces
social anxiety, fear and other negative feelings. By learning more
about what underlies this experience, then learning to reframe their
response, lonely individuals can reverse the feedback loop, overcome
fear and find ways to reconnect.
“We try to offer some help for
those who’ve become stuck,” said Patrick. “The process begins in
rediscovering those positive, physiological sensations that come
during the simplest moments of human contact. But that means
overcoming the fear and reaching out.”
“Lonely people feel a hunger,”
Cacioppo added. “The key is to realize that the solution lies not in
being fed, but in cooking for and enjoying a meal with others.”
-- Courtesy
of Psychcentral.com
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