Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Bad Cold Becomes Worse When You're Lonely

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Apr, 2017 01:20 PM
    Suffering from a cold is annoying enough, but if you are lonely, the chances are you would feel even worse, a study says.
     
    People who feel lonely are more prone to report that their cold symptoms are more severe than those who have stronger social bonds, said the study published in the journal Health Psychology.
     
    "Loneliness puts people at risk for premature mortality and all kinds of other physical illnesses," said one of the researchers Angie LeRoy from Rice University in Houston, Texas.
     
    "But nothing had been done to look at an acute but temporary illness that we're all vulnerable to, like the common cold," LeRoy added.
     
    The researchers drew a distinction between feeling lonely and actual social isolation.
     
    "You can be in a crowded room and feel lonely. That perception is what seems to be important when it comes to these cold symptoms," LeRoy said. 
     
    Carrying out the study meant finding lonely people, isolating them -- and giving them a cold.
     
    A total of 159 people between ages 18 and 55 were assessed for their psychological and physical health, given cold-inducing nasal drops and quarantined for five days in hotel rooms.
     
    Those who were screened in advance for their level of loneliness and became infected reported a greater severity of symptoms than those recorded in previous studies used as controls. 
     
    The size of the participants' social networks appeared to have no bearing on how sick they felt.
     
    The findings are an incentive to be more socially active, LeRoy said.
     
    "If you build those networks -- consistently working on them and your relationships -- when you do fall ill, it may not feel so bad," she added.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!
    Each minute, 2,500 Britons engage in love amounting to a staggering 900 million encounters of the close kind a year -- yet the activity results in barely 770,000 British births each year, a Cambridge mathematician has claimed.

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids
    Just 12 minutes of exercise can improve attention and reading comprehension in low income adolescents, says a new study, suggesting that schools serving low income populations should work brief bouts of exercise into their daily schedules.

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy
    Do you get lured by healthy words such as 'antioxidant-rich', 'whole grain', 'organic' and so on into buying more packaged food? Be cautious, as these may actually lead you to put on extra kilos.

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones
    If you often feel sleepy during the day, chances are that your bones may also be fragile. Researchers have found that orexin proteins - blamed for spontaneous daytime sleepiness - also play a crucial role in bone formation.

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones

    Husband not involved in parenting? Blame his office

    Husband not involved in parenting? Blame his office
    With changing times, men try to see themselves as partners and nurturers besides being breadwinners and role models.

    Husband not involved in parenting? Blame his office

    How alcohol abuse damages brain at deeper level

    How alcohol abuse damages brain at deeper level
    In what could pave the way for new pharmaceutical drugs and therapeutic options that reverse the alterations produced by alcohol, researchers have identified, for the first time, the damages caused by chronic excessive abuse of alcohol to the brain at a molecular level.

    How alcohol abuse damages brain at deeper level