4.5 Article

Social isolation, social support and loneliness as independent concepts, and their relationship with health-related quality of life among older women

Journal

AGING & MENTAL HEALTH
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages 1335-1344

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13607863.2021.1940097

Keywords

Geriatrics; aged; 80 and over; ageing; age factors; interpersonal relations; social support; social isolation; loneliness; socioeconomic factors; social interaction; social connection; socioeconomic position; older adult; mental health; quality of life

Funding

  1. Australian Government Department of Health
  2. Australian Heart Foundation [101927]
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [APP1059660, APP1156072]
  4. Finkel Professorial Fellowship - Finkel Family Foundation
  5. Monash Strategic Bridging Fellowship

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This study found that social isolation, social support, and loneliness have independent associations with health-related quality of life (HRQoL), with loneliness showing the strongest negative impact. Women with high social support and not feeling lonely had the best HRQoL outcomes.
Objectives: To assess whether social isolation, social support, and loneliness are independently associated with health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Method: Retrospective analysis including 10,517 women aged 70-75 years from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH). Social isolation, social support (Duke Social Support Index), and loneliness (single item) were investigated for their association with standardised HRQoL (physical [PCS] and mental [MCS] components of the SF-36 (R) questionnaire). Analyses were adjusted for sociodemographic variables and number of medical conditions. Results: Only 3% reported being socially isolated, having low social support and being lonely, and 34% reported being not socially isolated, high social support and not being lonely. Each construct was independently associated with HRQoL, with loneliness having the strongest inverse association (PCS: isolation -0.98, low support -2.01, loneliness -2.03; MCS: isolation -1.97, low support -4.79, loneliness -10.20; p-value < 0.001 for each). Women who were not isolated or lonely and with high social support had the greatest HRQoL (compared to isolated, low social support and lonely; MCS: 17 to 18 points higher, PCS: 5 to 8 points higher). Other combinations of social isolation, social support and loneliness varied in their associations with HRQoL. Conclusion: Ageing populations face the challenge of supporting older people to maintain longer, healthy, meaningful and community-dwelling lives. Among older women, social isolation, low social support and loneliness are distinct, partially overlapping yet interconnected concepts that coexist and are each adversely associated with HRQoL. Findings should be replicated in other cohorts to ensure generalisability across other age groups and men.

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