posted on 2003-09-01, 00:00authored bySheldon CohenSheldon Cohen, William J Doyle, Ronald Turner, Cuneyt M Alper, David P Skoner
There is considerable evidence that social relationships
can influence health, but only limited evidence on the health effects of
the personality characteristics that are thought to mold people’s social
lives. We asked whether
sociability
predicts resistance to infectious
disease and whether this relationship is attributable to the
quality and quantity of social interactions and relationships. Three
hundred thirty-four volunteers completed questionnaires assessing
their sociability, social networks, and social supports, and six evening
interviews assessing daily interactions. They were subsequently exposed
to a virus that causes a common cold and monitored to see who
developed verifiable illness. Increased sociability was associated in a
linear fashion with a decreased probability of developing a cold. Although
sociability was associated with more and higher-quality social
interactions, it predicted disease susceptibility independently of these
variables. The association between sociability and disease was also
independent of baseline immunity (virus-specific antibody), demographics,
emotional styles, stress hormones, and health practices.