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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Social Connections: Not Just for Mental health

    Last Modified: Feb 6, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

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    Youโ€™ve probably heard of the Roseto effect, the name coined to describe one curious statistic about the otherwise ordinary town of Roseto, PA. At the beginning of the 20th century, people in Roseto died from heart disease half as often as people anywhere else. This didnโ€™t happen in the surrounding towns; Roseto was basically a tiny island of heart health. The only noticeable difference that researchers could come up with to explain the puzzle was social cohesion: Roseto was a tight-knit immigrant community where social bonds were strong and flourishing.

    Unfortunately, we now know those researchers were right, because the loss of those social bonds brought the cardiac death rate up to normal. As financial prosperity and social mobility slowly chipped away at the community, cardiac deaths in Roseto slowly rose to meet the national average. It really was their sense of community that had protected them from heart disease, and as they lost that, they got steadily sicker.

    Thatโ€™s bad news for the modern US, because weโ€™re getting more and more isolated every year: by the latest numbers, 25% of adults have nobody at all to talk to about a serious problem or important topic like a divorce or an illness. The most famously lonely people are the elderly, but even younger and working-age adults are getting increasingly isolated.

    If we think about the health dangers of loneliness* at all, we tend to think in terms of mental health โ€“ and that certainly is a big problem. But loneliness isnโ€™t just bad for your mind; itโ€™s also physically unhealthy in very real and demonstrable ways.

    *โ€œLonelinessโ€ here doesnโ€™t mean โ€œbeing alone.โ€ You can be alone without feeling lonely, and you can be lonely in a crowd of people. Loneliness means that you donโ€™t have enough meaningful relationships to meet your personal needs.

    Loneliness and Physical Health

    This study looked at the risk of death from all causes for people with strong or weak social groups. The researchers found that after controlling for other variables (age, sex, etc.), people with stronger social networks had a 50% higher likelihood of survival than people with less social support. Social isolation was riskier than obesity, smoking, physical inactivity, heavy drinking, hypertension, and air pollution exposure.

    Hereโ€™s the chart from the study showing the relative risks of various different things (source). The longer the bar, the riskier it is to make the unhealthy choice in that category. So for example, "smoking" shows the dangers of smoking; "physical activity" shows the dangers of NOT exercising.

    loneliness

    All other things being equal, if youโ€™re obese but have a strong network of friends, you have a lower risk of death than a thin person without that support. If dieting makes you lose your social ties, you would have been healthier without the weight loss.

    So how does that actually work?

    How Social Connections Improve Health

    This study explains how social integration improves health in two different ways:

    • Stress buffering: meaningful human contact actually has hormonal effects that counteract stressors in your life. Chronic stress contributes to hormone-driven problems like insulin resistance and depression, and even apparently unrelated issues like gut dysfunction: just look at the links between IBS and mental health. Itโ€™s one of the worst possible things you could ever do to your body, not to mention your mind, Social integration provides a kind of shield against these effects from a physiological perspective: it actually lowers the stress hormone cortisol, reducing all the downstream physiological problems of stress.
    ModernStressors Paleo
    Strong social connections reduce the health risks of all kinds of chronic stress.
    • Main effects: Where stress buffering is more biological; main effects are more behavioral. For example, if youโ€™re part of a group of caring friends, youโ€™ll have people who can drive you to the doctor when youโ€™re sick, or push you to get something checked out and potentially catch a problem early.

    So how does this translate into actual diseases? Take a lookโ€ฆ

    Cardiovascular health.

    Remember the Roseto Effect? The people in Roseto didnโ€™t eat particularly well, but they had much lower rates of cardiovascular death thanks to their social ties. Heart disease is one of the biggest killers in the US, but weโ€™ve been focusing on demonizing perfectly innocent nutrients (saturated fat comes to mind) instead of looking at the real causes (of which there are many, but loneliness is one).

    This study goes into detail about how loneliness actually causes physical changes that contribute to cardiovascular injury:

    • Social isolation worsens blood pressure and heart rate spikes in response to stress.
    • Social isolation impairs your ability to recover from injuries to the walls of the arteries.
    • Social isolation may impair platelet function, but thereโ€™s not enough research to show this for sure yet.
    • Social support encourages cardioprotective behaviors (e.g. exercise), even when theyโ€™re difficult (e.g. quitting smoking).

    Inflammation and Immunity

    Loneliness worsens the inflammatory stress response, which throws the entire immune system out of whack.

    • This editorial in the journal Nature discusses a scientist who studies social isolation, happiness, and immunology. Social isolation and loneliness actually change gene expression in lonely people, turning up inflammation and turning down immunity.
    • This study actually simulated a flight to Mars (it doesnโ€™t get much more lonely than life on another planet), and found the same thing: the isolation caused noticeable differences in leukocyte functions and โ€œpoorly controlled immune responses.โ€

    Cancer

    Loneliness can even affect recovery from certain kinds of cancers:

    • In this study, women with strong social ties did much better after a diagnosis of breast cancer.
    • This study found essentially the same thing for women with all kinds of gynecologic cancers (cervical, endometrial, ovarian, and vulvar).
    • This study (in mice, but still interesting) found that social isolation made the mice more susceptible to development of liver tumors. This research is interesting because it shows that the effect is due to the isolation itself. In the women with cancer, the better outcomes could have been because they had more people to drive them to appointments, or to make sure they took their medicine, but the mice were treated exactly equally in every other way and isolation was still dangerous.

    In other words, if you really like feeling sick all the time and just canโ€™t wait to die of chronic disease, the fastest way to make that happen is to isolate yourself from the people around you. On the other hand, if you want a strong defense against diseases and like the idea of staying healthy as you get older, you need close social connections.

    Unfortunately, with so many social events revolving around junk food, it can sometimes be hard to balance a healthy diet and a healthy friend groupโ€ฆ

    Balancing Paleo and your Social Life

    Do any of these sound familiar?

    • โ€œI was going to go to the party, but itโ€™s going to be full of junk food and Iโ€™ll look weird if I donโ€™t eat anything. Maybe Iโ€™ll just stay home.โ€
    • โ€œI donโ€™t see my friends anymore because theyโ€™re always going out for ice cream and they give me grief if I donโ€™t join in.โ€
    • โ€œI canโ€™t handle another party full of junk. If I go, Iโ€™ll eat something bad. Iโ€™ll stay here and bake my own Paleo cookies.โ€

    Some people never feel this way, and thatโ€™s fine. But other people do, and thatโ€™s OK too. Itโ€™s normal to have trouble navigating social relationships that are based on food when suddenly you donโ€™t eat that food anymore.

    If this is you, actively take steps to preserve those connections. Some people have huge success by suggesting activities that arenโ€™t about food, or simply steering conversations away from the menu on to more interesting topics. Other people decide very reasonably that 90% Paleo with friends beats 100% Paleo with only your organic spinach for company.

    However you address it, friends are just as important for your health as what you eat โ€“ donโ€™t let the quest for a healthy diet endanger your social relationships. Humans are tribal animals: we evolved that way, and weโ€™re built to need certain kinds of social nourishment just as much as we need certain kinds of physical nourishment. Isolation is just as โ€œnon-Paleoโ€ as wheat or soybeans, and the consequences are just as dangerous: do your health a favor and make social connections just as much of a priority as good food.

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