People living alone double
their risk of serious heart disease
Newswise — People who live alone
double their risk of serious heart disease as those who live with a
partner, suggests research in the Journal of Epidemiology and
Community Health. This includes severe angina and heart attack.
The finding is based on a study of
more than 138,000 adults between the ages of 30 and 69 living in one
area (Aarhus) of Denmark.
Between 2000 and 2002, 646 people
were diagnosed with severe angina, or sustained a heart attack, or
sudden cardiac death, a spectrum of conditions known as acute
coronary syndrome.
When analysed in detail, using
information from population registers, poor educational attainment
and living on a pension were associated with an increased risk of
the syndrome.
But the two strongest predictive
factors for the syndrome were age and living alone.
Women above the age of 60 and
living by themselves, and men over the age of 50, in the same
position, were twice as likely to have the syndrome as everyone
else.
Lone women over 60 comprised just
over 5 per cent, and lone men over 50 just under 8 per cent, of the
whole population.
Yet lone women in this age group
accounted for a third of all deaths from the syndrome within 30 days
of diagnosis, while lone men in this age group accounted for two
thirds of deaths.
The lowest risks included
cohabiting with a partner, a high level of education, and being in
work. Women divorcees also enjoyed a lower risk of the syndrome.
The authors say that certain risk
factors tend to be more common in the lifestyles of those who live
by themselves, which may help to explain the differences.
These include smoking, obesity,
high cholesterol and fewer visits to the family doctor. People
living on their own may be less able to draw on social support
networks as well, say the authors.