Friends With Health Benefits: The Long-Term Benefits of Early Peer Social Integration for Blood Pressure and Obesity in Midlife.
Jenny M CundiffKaren A MatthewsPublished in: Psychological science (2018)
In adults, greater social integration is associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, including hypertension. Social integration earlier in life may be similarly associated with cardiovascular risk. Using a longitudinal sample of 267 Black and White men, we examined whether greater social integration with peers during childhood and adolescence, assessed by parent report, prospectively predicts lower blood pressure and body mass index two decades later in adulthood and whether these effects differ by race, given well-documented racial disparities in hypertension. Boys who were reported by their parents to be more socially integrated with peers evidenced lower blood pressure and body mass index in adulthood, and this effect was not accounted for by body mass index in childhood, childhood socioeconomic status, childhood hostility, childhood physical health, extraversion measured in adolescence, or concurrent adult self-reports of social integration. Results did not differ by race, but analyses were not powered to detect interactions of small effect size.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- body mass index
- mental health
- healthcare
- early life
- hypertensive patients
- cardiovascular disease
- depressive symptoms
- weight gain
- childhood cancer
- physical activity
- public health
- heart rate
- type diabetes
- insulin resistance
- emergency department
- weight loss
- health information
- rectal cancer
- climate change
- adipose tissue
- electronic health record
- adverse drug