Abstract

Various aspects of social relationships have been examined as risk factors for mortality. In particular, most research has focused on either loneliness or social disengagement. We aimed to extend the current research by adding a group-level segregation measure utilizing the whole social network of one entire village in South Korea. The analyses were based on the Korean Social Life, Health and Aging Project data collected over eight years across five waves. Of the 679 old adults who participated throughout the entire project (to wave 5), 63 were confirmed as deceased. All three aspects of social relationships examined, loneliness, social disengagement, and group-level segregation, were associated with mortality in the traditional Cox proportional hazard model without considering health-related time-varying covariates. However, a Cox marginal structural model, a counterfactual statistical measure that is designed to control for censoring bias due to sample attrition over the eight years and time-varying confounding variables, revealed that only group-level segregation was associated with mortality. Our results strongly suggest that more attention is needed on group-level segregation for mortality studies, as well as on well-known individual-level risk factors, including social disengagement and loneliness. All methods were carried out in accordance with relevant guidelines and regulations.

Highlights

  • Various aspects of social relationships have been examined as risk factors for mortality

  • Group-level segregation measures a different dimension of social relationships from that of loneliness or disengagement— people who are group-level segregated may have many friends, but even if they were to extend the degree of connections as far as possible, the total number of social ties they are able to reach would be small and, they are segregated as a group

  • People are able to engage in various social activities with their close friends and, do not feel lonely; if all of their friends, as a group, form a small clique that is segregated from the rest of the community, they are classified as group-level segregated

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Summary

Introduction

Various aspects of social relationships have been examined as risk factors for mortality. All three aspects of social relationships examined, loneliness, social disengagement, and group-level segregation, were associated with mortality in the traditional Cox proportional hazard model without considering health-related time-varying covariates. Our results strongly suggest that more attention is needed on group-level segregation for mortality studies, as well as on well-known individual-level risk factors, including social disengagement and loneliness. In addition to loneliness and social disengagement, we included a third dimension of social relationships that is a risk factor for mortality: group-level segregation. This study defines group-level segregated people as Scientific Reports | (2021) 11:465 Those who belong to a social group with a relatively small diameter. To measure group-level segregation, we needed the complete social network of the entire village under study.

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