The associations of premorbid social isolation and social support with self-rated health and heart failure outcomes in the atherosclerosis risk in communities (ARIC) Study
Kennedy M. Peter-Marske, Annie Green Howard, Kelly R. Evenson, Sara Jones Berkeley, Joanna Maselko, Mario Sims, Stuart D. Russell, Anna Kucharska-Newton, Kevin J. Sullivan, Wayne D. Rosamond

TL;DR
This study explores how social isolation and social support affect health and heart failure outcomes in a long-term community-based study.
Contribution
The study reveals gender-specific effects of social isolation on mortality and quantifies the impact of social support on health trajectories before and after heart failure.
Findings
Low social support is linked to worse self-rated health over time.
Low belonging social support is associated with longer time to rehospitalization.
Social isolation increases mortality risk in females but not in males.
Abstract
We assessed whether social isolation (SI), social support (SS), and subtypes of SS were associated with self-rated health trajectories and clinical heart failure (HF) outcomes among participants with incident HF hospitalizations. We included 2967 Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study participants with incident HF hospitalization after Visit 2 (1990–1992). SI, SS, and subtypes of SS were measured at Visit 2. We identified incident HF hospitalization as ICD-9 code 428 and physician adjudicated events; on average HF occurred 17 (SD 8) years after Visit 2. We assessed associations with trajectories of annually measured self-rated health in the 4 years prior to and after incident HF hospitalization (excellent/good self-rated health on a 0–100 scale), using linear mixed effects models. We calculated hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for associations with time to first…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Cardiac Health and Mental Health · Chronic Disease Management Strategies
