PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Older adults experiencing social isolation are more likely to smoke

Social isolation among U.S. adults aged 65 and older increases the risk of smoking and premature death.

2023-07-06
(Press-News.org) Aging brings wisdom and experience; however, for some individuals getting older can also mean health challenges, loss of friends, and decreased mobility, leading to social isolation. Both the U.S. Surgeon General and the National Academy of Medicine have issued recent warnings about the growing public health concern of social isolation and loneliness and its association with premature death among the elderly.

Not having anyone to call (via phone or online) or not interacting with people in the community are forms of social isolation, which affects nearly a fifth of U.S. adults over the age of 65. There are different levels of social isolation – from having some communication with others and only sometimes feeling isolated or lonely to the more extreme: zero connections with other people. A new study by Associate Professor Gilbert Gimm and associates found social isolation to be a risk factor for smoking.

The study found that 17.1% of older adults in the U.S. were socially isolated and more likely to smoke compared to those with social interactions with others in the community. Additionally, older adults with higher levels of depression and anxiety had greater odds of smoking. 

“Older adults with limited or no social connections are more likely to smoke, which in turn leads to health challenges and premature death. Reducing social isolation in older adults can help to improve their health and life expectancy,” said Gimm.

Older adults who experienced moderate social isolation, such as only being able to connect via phone, but never seeing anyone in person, were twice as likely to smoke as someone who is socially connected. Older adults who had severe social isolation, such as no connection or interaction with anyone in the community, were five times as likely to smoke as those who were socially connected.

Researchers say it is not yet clear whether smoking behavior leads to social isolation or if social isolation leads to smoking, but both factors increase the risk of health challenges and premature death.

For this study, researchers analyzed data from a national sample of 8,136 adults aged 65 or older who participated in the National Health and Aging Trends Study.

Examining the Association of Social Isolation and Smoking in Older Adults was published in Journal of Applied Gerontology in June 2023. Former Mason PhD student Mary Louise Pomeroy and Thomas K.M. Cudjoe from Johns Hopkins University were co-authors of the study. Both co-authors were supported by National Institute on Aging grants.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pennington Biomedical working to give children the best chance at a healthy life

Pennington Biomedical working to give children the best chance at a healthy life
2023-07-06
BATON ROUGE – One in five children have obesity in the U.S., and even more are considered overweight. Dr. Amanda Staiano, associate professor at Pennington Biomedical Research Center and director of the Pediatric Obesity and Health Behavior Laboratory, believes childhood obesity is at the top of the list for public health issues of this century because children with obesity are much more likely to develop heart disease, diabetes, asthma, sleep problems and other issues. Dr. Staiano's background is in developmental psychology, and she studies how to make sure children are growing in a healthy way and in ...

Multiple factors delay timely endometriosis diagnosis, study shows

2023-07-06
Reviewing qualitative studies from the past 20 years, the researchers found a range of contributing factors including: a continuing stigma around periods; society’s normalisation of menstrual pain; and a lack of medical training about the condition. Endometriosis, which affects 10% of women globally and 1.5 million women in the UK alone, is caused by endometrial (womb) tissue growing outside the womb. It’s extremely painful, exhausting, interferes with daily life and can lead to infertility if untreated. The researchers found that women in the studies often weren’t sure if their pain was unusual or severe enough to seek treatment. ...

Food labels offer consumer choices but also confusion about animal welfare

Food labels offer consumer choices but also confusion about animal welfare
2023-07-06
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Animal-based food products often come packaged in a wide array of information labels, including organic, natural, grass-fed, humanely raised and pasture-raised.  “There’s some confusion about food labels related to animal welfare,” said Purdue University’s Marisa Erasmus, associate professor of animal sciences and a specialist in animal behavior and welfare. “It’s typically up to the consumer to do their homework and figure out what these different claims mean. Labels do provide consumers with a choice because, in theory, you can ...

Department of Energy announces $2.2 million for U.S.-Japan cooperative research in high energy physics

2023-07-06
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $2.2 million for 11 collaborative research projects in high energy physics that involve substantial collaboration with Japanese investigators. For over forty years, collaboration between U.S. and Japanese scientists has enabled progress in some of the most challenging areas in high energy physics. Working together, researchers explore the universe at the smallest and largest scales, from the most elementary constituents of matter and energy to the nature of space and time. ...

Multistakeholder collaborations are vital to advancing technologies in Parkinson’s

2023-07-06
TUCSON, Ariz., July 6, 2023 — Critical Path Institute (C-Path) and the Center for Health + Technology (CHeT) at University of Rochester today announced the release of two seminal publications about digital health technologies for Parkinson’s. These technologies, such as smartphones and wearable sensors, offer an opportunity for objective, frequent and remote assessment of people with Parkinson’s. With 10 million people living with Parkinson’s worldwide, collaboration and data sharing are crucial for driving innovation in drug development for the fastest-growing degenerative neurological condition. Research leaders at CHeT have joined ...

THC use during pregnancy linked to changes in fetal development

2023-07-06
Oregon Health & Science University researchers showed that consuming THC while pregnant could potentially affect development of the fetus and lead to life-long health impacts for offspring. The preclinical study was published today in the journal Clinical Epigenetics. Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, is the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, a substance growing in popularity and availability in the United States. The prevalence of cannabis use in pregnancy is also rapidly increasing, especially during the first trimester — a time when the fetus is most vulnerable to environmental exposures — ...

New insight into how plant cells divide

New insight into how plant cells divide
2023-07-06
Every time a stem cell divides, one daughter cell remains a stem cell while the other takes off on its own developmental journey. But both daughter cells require specific and different cellular materials to fulfill their destinies. Animal stem cells use the cytoskeleton – a transient network of structural tubules – to physically pull the correct materials from the parent cell into each daughter cell during the split. Plants also have stem cells that need to distribute different materials ...

Eliminating extra chromosomes in cancer cells prevent tumor growth

2023-07-06
New Haven, Conn. — Cancer cells with extra chromosomes depend on those chromosomes for tumor growth, a new Yale study reveals, and eliminating them prevents the cells from forming tumors. The findings, said the researchers, suggest that selectively targeting extra chromosomes may offer a new route for treating cancer.   The study was published July 6 in the journal Science.   Human cells typically have 23 pairs of chromosomes; extra chromosomes are an anomaly known as aneuploidy.   “If you look at normal skin or normal lung tissue, for example, 99.9% of the cells will have the right number of chromosomes,” said ...

Fantasy football in math class?

Fantasy football in math class?
2023-07-06
While mathematics is a fundamental skill crucial to daily life, U.S. parents today see math education as boring, outdated, and disconnected from the real world. (1) At the national level, short and long-term achievement trends paint a disconcerting picture of the need for innovative math education strategies: Math scores among eighth graders dropped in 2022, to the lowest score since 20031 Math scores declined for students regardless of racial and ethnic group, gender, parental education, or disability status1 The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated declines in math achievement; the median school district lost about ...

Mobile phone data used for public health underrepresent vulnerable populations

Mobile phone data used for public health underrepresent vulnerable populations
2023-07-06
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Mobile phone data are increasingly used in public health management and disease outbreak response, as demonstrated during the COVID-19 pandemic when location data were used as a proxy for human movement and contacts and informed exposure notification apps. However, a new study led by researchers at Penn State revealed that phone data may not accurately reflect under-resourced or particularly vulnerable populations, who are often underrepresented in other data as well.  If this bias is not acknowledged or complemented with additional ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Breast cancer death rates have stopped going down

Developing zero-waste, sustainable smart polymer materials

AI has ‘great potential’ for detecting wildfires, new study of the Amazon rainforest suggests

Magnetic catalysts enhance tumor treatment via electronic density regulation

 Quantum dot discovery for LEDs brings brighter, more eco-friendly displays

Phosphorus doping stabilizes high-energy polymeric nitrogen at ambient pressure

Maternal cannabis use triples risk of disruptive behaviour in children

Balancing Nutrition: Micronutrient study could help prevent childhood obesity in Pacific region

Lightening the load of augmented reality glasses

Sneaky clocks: uncovering Einstein’s relativity in an interacting atomic playground

The chances of anything coming from Mars

Scientists unlock clues to new treatments for muscular dystrophy

Anti-obesity drugs benefit kidney transplant recipients with type 2 diabetes

Cases of Parkinson’s disease set to reach 25 million worldwide by 2050

Throat microbiome holds clues to older Australians’ health

Diabetes drug could help cancer patients make better recovery  

Seismic study of Singapore could guide urban construction and renewable energy development

Tufts scientists develop open-source software for modeling soft materials

Repurposed ALS drug becomes imaging probe to help diagnose neurodegeneration

AI can open up beds in the ICU

Are robotic hernia repairs still in the “learning curve” phase?

New STI impacts 1 in 3 women: Landmark study reveals men are the missing link

Feeling is believing: Bionic hand “knows” what it’s touching, grasps like a human

Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation awards $4.4 million to top young scientists

Over-the-counter pain relievers linked to improved recovery from concussion

Stressed out? It may increase the risk of stroke

Nanoscale tweaks help alloy withstand high-speed impacts

AI-generated voices which sound like you are perceived as more trustworthy and likeable, with implications for deep-fakes and manipulation

The cacao tree species (Theobroma cacao L.), from which we get chocolate, is likely about 7.5 million years old, with chloroplast genomes indicating that the current known diversity diversified during

After sexual misconduct accusations, scholars’ work is cited less

[Press-News.org] Older adults experiencing social isolation are more likely to smoke
Social isolation among U.S. adults aged 65 and older increases the risk of smoking and premature death.