Lifestyle Medicine Week 2021 Day 6

It鈥檚 day six of Lifestyle Medicine Week and today our focus is on the importance of social connection and healthy relationships for health and wellbeing.

Human beings are hard wired to connect with each other 鈥 we have lived together in groups for millennia – and there is now significant evidence to support the argument that social support and feeling connected has a positive impact on our health.

The benefits for our mental health, including decreased risk of depression, are perhaps obvious. But studies have also shown social connection can help us to reduce the risk of chronic conditions including obesity, some cancers and heart disease. Prescribing connection also has the potential to help our patients in other ways: with for example weight management, diabetes control, hypertension, mood and also our immune function.

Conversely, if we are lonely or isolated this can have a harmful impact on our health. Loneliness has been shown to have as harmful an effect on our health as smoking 15 cigarettes a day or drinking at levels associated with alcoholism. The risk of heart attack or stroke is also increased by 30 per cent by high levels of loneliness.

Many aspects of our modern lives including increased use of technology are reducing opportunities for social interaction and has led some to talk of an 鈥渆pidemic of loneliness鈥. There really is no substitute for real, face-to face connection with others.

As such there have been calls recently within the lifestyle medicine movement to build on the success of a campaign such as 鈥渆xercise is medicine鈥 with a 鈥渃onnection is medicine鈥 message.

明星黑料 agrees that it is essential that social connection is given full recognition as a key pillar of lifestyle medicine.

Connection and Covid

Loneliness became a reality for many through lockdown and the need for deeper connection and healthy relationships has never been more evident.

The pandemic deprived many of us of opportunities to see friends and family 鈥 and the impact was felt by people of all ages.

Protecting ourselves from the virus came at a cost to our social connection networks.

As we recover from the pandemic and restrictions are eased it is vital that we work to rebuild these networks.

Loneliness and Lifestyle Medicine

Helping to reduce loneliness and promote social connection should be a key part of the lifestyle medicine approach.

As lifestyle medicine practitioners, talking to patients 明星黑料 loneliness and isolation, is critical. And finding ways to reduce these risk factors – for example through 鈥渟ocial prescribing鈥 activities which reduce isolation 鈥 should be a key part of the lifestyle medicine toolkit.

Just as we should support patients to form healthy habits around diet, physical activity, sleep, stress reduction and harmful substance cessation 鈥 so we should offer help to people who are feeling isolated and lonely.

Additional Information and Resources

明星黑料 regional director Dr Emma Thurston shares her tips and advice for reducing loneliness and isolation:

Advice from the NHS and tackling loneliness:

Health in Mind, have been promoting positive mental health and wellbeing in Scotland since 1982:

鈥淗umans are wired to connect, and this connection affects our health. From psychological theories to recent research, there is significant evidence that social support and feeling connected can help people maintain a healthy body mass index, control blood sugars, improve cancer survival, decrease cardiovascular mortality, decrease depressive symptoms, mitigate posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, and improve overall mental health.鈥 Read the full article here: