Social isolation and loneliness and their association with all-cause mortality. A population-based longitudinal study in Norway: The Tromsø Study 1994–2023
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35814Date
2024-11-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Methods - The study sample comprised 9061 women and 8735 men aged 25 to 69 years who participated in the Tromsø4 survey (1994–95, baseline) of the Tromsø Study, Norway. A subset of the study sample also attended the Tromsø5 (2001), Tromsø6 (2007–08), and Tromsø7 (2015–16) surveys. Participants were followed up for all-cause mortality until November 2023; with 1630 women and 2099 men deceased. Information on social isolation (least isolated, modestly isolated, and most isolated) and loneliness (yes, no) were taken from self-administered questionnaires. Sex-specific, time-varying Cox models were employed, updating exposures and covariates from Tromsø5.
Results - Most-isolated versus least-isolated women and men had hazard ratios of 1.37 (95 % confidence interval 1.18–1.59) and 1.41 (1.25–1.60), respectively, after adjustment for covariates. These hazard ratios were higher in younger adults (HR = 1.55 in women and HR = 1.76 in men aged <50 years at baseline), though the age-isolation interaction was not statistically significant in women (P = 0.26), but in men (P = 0.01). For loneliness, the adjusted hazard ratios were 1.51 (1.23–1.87) and 1.46 (1.16–1.84). Over time, 51 % and 47 % of participants remained most isolated at Tromsø5 and Tromsø7, respectively; 25 % of those initially lonely remained so at Tromsø5, while only 2.6 % of those initially non-lonely became lonely at Tromsø5.
Conclusion - Both social isolation and loneliness are strongly associated with all-cause mortality, particularly among younger adults, underscoring their importance as public health concerns.