Want to be healthy and live longer? Lift some weights, eat nutritious food, and... hang out with your friends. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill published a study this week that found the quality of a person's relationships affect health measures like obesity and hypertension. For instance, teenagers who are socially isolated face the same risk for developing inflammation as people who don't exercise. Adults, meanwhile, are more likely to develop hypertension from social isolation than from diabetes. Study author Kathleen Mullan Harris said, "the theory is that social relationships can buffer some of the effects of stress and/or help with coping.” |
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