Having good neighbors may reduce your heart attack risk, new research suggests.
The
study included more than 5,000 U.S. adults, average age 70, who were
followed for four years. Sixty-two percent were married, and nearly
two-thirds were women.
The
participants were asked to rate how much they felt like they were part
of their neighborhood, if their neighbors were friendly and would help
them if they got into difficulty, and if they trusted most of their
neighbors. Collectively, this is known as neighborhood social cohesion.
During
the four years of follow-up, 148 (66 women and 82 men) had a heart
attack. People who had reported higher levels of neighborhood social
cohesion were less likely to suffer a heart attack, the study found.
Specifically,
a single unit increase in neighborhood social cohesion was associated
with a 17 percent reduced risk of heart attack, according to the
findings published online Aug. 18 in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.
The
reduced heart attack risk associated with higher levels of perceived
neighborhood social cohesion remained even after the researchers took
other factors into account.
The results support other
studies that found a connection between living in good neighborhoods
and reduced risk of heart attack and stroke. However, while the study
found an association between the two, it did not prove a
cause-and-effect link.
"Perceived neighborhood social
cohesion could be a type of social support that is available in the
neighborhood social environment outside the realm of family and
friends," Eric Kim, from the department of psychology at the University
of Michigan, and colleagues wrote.
The findings
suggest that tight-knit neighborhoods may help encourage so-called
cohesive behaviors and help prevent antisocial behaviors, the authors
said in a journal news release.
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