Friends: Life Support
A good group of friends may safeguard you against the damaging effects of stress.
By Camille Chatterjee published May 1, 1999 - last reviewed on June 9, 2016
Facing a barrage of major stressors like getting fired or divorced
can permanently alter the cardiovascular system. But whether you face the
risk of heart disease down the road may be a matter of who your friends
are.
The more pals you have, the better you're protected from illness,
one study indicates. "There's good support for a link between people's
cardiovascular responses to stress and risk of disease," says psychologist Mark Roy. Roy is referring not to daily hassles, like minor arguments
or waiting in line, but major life events involving big changes, like
mourning the loss of a loved one or relocating. Too many over time may
raise your blood pressure, setting the stage for heart disease.
Roy and his team wanted to see whether people with greater social
support were more resilient to such shocks. He put a group of firefighters
through arithmetic and speech tasks, measuring their blood pressure
between each trial, and asked them how many people they claimed as close
friends. Men facing a large number of stressful life events showed more
reactivity between tasks—meaning that their blood pressure soared
higher—than those with fewer such events. But having a strong network
speeded their recovery from the rise in blood pressure, as if protecting
against its damaging effects.
Rising blood pressure isn't always harmful; it surges when we
exercise. The body's dramatic response to tensions may not be as risky as
how well it recovers—something that relies on a little help from your
friends.