4.4 Review

Does social isolation, social support or loneliness influence health or well-being after a cardiovascular disease event? A narrative thematic systematic review

期刊

HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY
卷 30, 期 1, 页码 E16-E38

出版社

WILEY-HINDAWI
DOI: 10.1111/hsc.13427

关键词

anxiety disorders; cardiac rehabilitation; cardiovascular diseases; depression; interpersonal relations; loneliness; marital status; medication adherence; psychological distress; quality of life; rehabilitation; residence characteristics; self‐ care; social conditions; social isolation; social support; spouses

资金

  1. National Heart Foundation of Australia Post-doctoral Fellowship [101927]
  2. Monash International Tuition Scholarship [30072360]
  3. Monash Graduate Scholarship [30072360]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This systematic review investigated the association between social health and mental health outcomes and patient needs among cardiac patients in Australia and New Zealand. The findings suggest that better social health is consistently associated with better mental health outcomes and meeting patient needs. Further research focusing on women and gender-disaggregated reporting is needed to fully understand the impact of social factors on health outcomes after a cardiovascular disease event.
Identification of factors which influence health after a cardiovascular disease (CVD) event will assist with reducing the high health and economic burden of CVD. We undertook a systematic review to investigate the association between social health (lower social isolation, higher social support and lower loneliness) and health and well-being after a CVD event among people living in Australia and New Zealand. Four electronic databases were systematically searched until June 2020. Two reviewers undertook title/abstract screen. One reviewer undertook full-text screen and data extraction. A second author either independently extracted or checked data. Narrative thematic analysis was undertaken. Of the 752 unique records retrieved, 39 papers from 29 studies met our inclusion criteria. Included studies recruited between 10 and 1,455 participants, aged 12-96 years, and the majority were male. Greater social health was consistently associated with better mental health outcomes (lower depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms and psychological distress). Lower social isolation and higher social support were associated with the extent to which patient needs were being met. Living situation was not associated with mental health outcomes, and being married or living with someone was associated with greater medication adherence. Our systematic review demonstrates that greater social health is associated with better mental health outcomes and met patient needs among cardiac patients. As partner status and living status did not align with social isolation and social support findings in this review, we recommend they not be used as social health proxies when assessing health outcomes among CVD patients. Our review highlights the need for more research focused on women and the importance of gender-disaggregated reporting. Further assessment is required to evaluate whether loneliness is associated with health and well-being outcomes after a CVD event.

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