Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • I'm Gabe Garza with today's health news. Feeling socially isolated can have physiological consequences

  • that could affect your life span, a new study found. More specifically, a loneliness expert

  • at the University of Chicago, found that loneliness may lead to "fight-or-flight stress signaling,"

  • which might weaken the immune system. Loneliness is hard to measure, so researchers studied

  • humans and primates in "perceived social isolation." Both the lonely humans and lonely primates

  • showed reactions that could both weaken the immune system and promote inflammation. Chronic

  • inflammation has been linked to many aspects of health, including an increased risk of

  • cancer, bowel disease and heart disease. Overall, compared to people and primates who weren't

  • lonely, loneliness appeared to raise the risk of premature death from any cause by 14 percent.

I'm Gabe Garza with today's health news. Feeling socially isolated can have physiological consequences

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it