The Borneo Post

Are lonely hearts prone to cardiovasc­ular disease?

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PARIS: Feeling lonely contribute­s less to the risk of cardiovasc­ular disease than recent research suggests, scientists said yesterday, but social isolation really does up the odds of dying after a heart attack or stroke.

The alleged link between loneliness and heart disease essentiall­y disappears once other well-known risk factors – smoking, drinking, poor diet, lack of exercise – are factored in, according to a study that monitored nearly 480,000 men and women in Britain for seven years.

Likewise the supposed impact of feeling friendless on premature death. But even after dodgy lifestyle habits are taken into considerat­ion, social isolation – time actually spent alone – boosted the risk of dying by about thirty per cent in people who suffered a stroke or heart attack, according to the study, published in Heart, a medical journal.

“Social isolation, but not loneliness remained as an independen­t risk factor for mortality,” the researcher­s, led by Christian Hakulinen, a professor at the University of Helsinki, concluded.

Earlier efforts to tease out the influence of a solitary existence on cardiovasc­ular disease and heart- related mortality had produced mixed results, in part due to the relatively small number of people covered.

For the new study, Hakulinen and his team drew from the socalled Biobank cohort, in which 479,054 people aged 40 to 69 were monitored for seven years. — AFP

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