Providing social support may be more beneficial than receiving it: results from a prospective study of mortality.
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Stephanie Brown
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Nesse RM
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Vinokur AD
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Dylan Smith
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This study examines the relative contributions of giving versus receiving support to longevity in a sample of older married adults. Baseline indicators of giving and receiving support were used to predict mortality status over a 5-year period in the Changing Lives of Older Couples sample. Results from logistic regression analyses indicated that mortality was significantly reduced for individuals who reported providing instrumental support to friends, relatives, and neighbors, and individuals who reported providing emotional support to their spouse. Receiving support had no effect on mortality once giving support was taken into consideration. This pattern of findings was obtained after controlling for demographic, personality, health, mental health, and marital-relationship variables. These results have implications for understanding how social contact influences health and longevity.
Related Topics:
Social support
Citation
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Brown S, Nesse RM, Vinokur AD, Smith DM. Providing social support may be more beneficial than receiving it: results from a prospective study of mortality.. Psychological Science 2003;14:320-327.
Stephanie Brown, PhD
Stephanie Brown is a social psychologist who received her PhD from Arizona State University in 1999. Her research utilizes a bio-altruistic framework to examine the biology of close relationships and the implications for physical health and mental illness. Currently, she is interested in the...
Dylan Smith, PhD
Dylan Smith studied social psychology at Arizona State University, where his work focused on interpersonal and intergroup relations and evolutionary psychology. His current research seeks to translate theoretical and methodological advances in the behavioral sciences to the study of health-related...