Being lonely does not just have an
immediate effect, in the long run, it shortens your lifespan—and as such, we
have to build more healthy relationships.
According to a new research,
loneliness shortens lifespan as much as being obese.
“Whether a person feels alone is as
much of a predictor of whether they will die prematurely as their weight,
researchers found. And they predict a loneliness ‘epidemic’ in the future
as more people live alone – and warn people need to start taking social relationships
more seriously.
They explained loneliness and social
isolation can take different forms. For example, someone may be surrounded by
people but still feel alone.Other people might isolate themselves because they
prefer to be alone. The effect on lifespan, however, is the same for those two
scenarios, researchers found,” MailOnline reports.
The lead author of the study-Julianne
Holt-Lunstad, of Brigham Young University, Utah, said; ‘the effect is
comparable to obesity, something that public health takes very seriously’ and
that ‘we need to start taking our social relationships more seriously.’
The research also found that the link
between loneliness and the risk of death is stronger among younger people.
Even though older people are
more likely to be lonely and face a higher risk of death, loneliness and social
isolation better predict premature death among groups of people younger than 65
years.
The co-author of the study-Tim Smith
also said that, ‘not only are we at the highest recorded rate of living alone
across the entire century, but we’re at the highest recorded rates ever on the
planet.’ He added; ‘with loneliness on the
rise, we are predicting a possible epidemic in the future.’
The study analysed data from a
variety of health studies—the sample included more than three million
participants from studies that held data for loneliness, social isolation, and
living alone.
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