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Chronic loneliness may greatly increase the risk of stroke in older adults, a new Harvard study shows.
How is loneliness connected to diabetes? In a tech-heavy world, social connections protect not just your mind, but your body, too.
Boston, MA—Chronic loneliness may significantly raise older adults’ risk of stroke, according to a new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Loneliness was associated with an increased risk for stroke in middle-aged and older adults, and the risk was particularly high among those with chronic loneliness, a study in eClinicalMedicine ...
Harvard study finds chronic loneliness raises stroke risk by 56% in adults over 50, highlighting the long-term impact of loneliness on health.
Social connections are vital for well-being, yet their absence can pose significant risks to health and longevity. Social isolation, the objective lack of interaction, and loneliness, the subjective ...
Chronic loneliness may significantly raise older adults' risk of stroke, according to a new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Chronic loneliness is associated with an increased risk for stroke, independently of depressive symptoms or social isolation, according to study results published in eClinicalMedicine. Loneliness ...
(Web Desk): A new medical study conducted in the United States has revealed that feelings of loneliness and social isolation ...
Our study found it may increase the risk of stroke in younger women." For the study, researchers looked at 426 people aged 18 to 49 who had an ischemic stroke with no known cause.
We know that chronic heightened stress is not optimal for physical health. A new study looks specifically at how it may increase the risk of stroke in certain people.
Interactions with friends and family may keep us healthy because they boost our immune system and reduce our risk of diseases such as heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes, new research suggests.