Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Creaven A.M.;Higgins N.M.;Ginty A.T.;Gallagher S.
2020
September
Biological psychology
Social support, social participation, and cardiovascular reactivity to stress in the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) study
Published
4 ()
Optional Fields
Cardiovascular reactivity Midlife MIDUS Social participation Social support
155
© 2020 Elsevier B.V. This study tested two hypotheses of associations between dimensions of social connectedness and cardiovascular reactivity to acute stress: (1) high social support predicts diminished cardiovascular responses to stress (i.e., the stress-buffering model of social support), and (2) diminished cardiovascular responses predict lower social participation, a form of motivated behaviour. Participants (N = 606) in the main Midlife in the United States study completed measures of social support and social participation and underwent psychophysiological stress testing. In unadjusted analyses, social support was positively, rather than inversely, associated with reactivity. Results withstood adjustment for several control variables, but not for depressive symptoms, which was associated with diminished reactivity. Further, diminished reactivity was associated with lower social participation, but not in fully adjusted models. No robust evidence was observed for either the stress-buffering model, or for an association between diminished reactivity and lower social participation. The implications for our understanding of links between social connectedness and cardiovascular reactivity are discussed.
0301-0511
10.1016/j.biopsycho.2020.107921
Grant Details