New Study Links Using Facebook and Living Longer

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09 November, 2016

A well-known study in 1979 found that people who socialize with others live longer than people who keep to themselves. A new study shows that socializing online may have health benefits as well.

To test the theory, researchers from Harvard, Yale, Northeastern and the University of California at San Diego looked at the Facebook profiles of 12 million people. Then they compared the profiles with the California Department of Public Health records over a two-year period from 2011 to 2013.

The researchers found that that people with more friends online were less likely to die than similar people who were not as connected.

The researchers published their findings in an article titled "Online social integration is associated with reduced mortality risk" in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Findings of the Study

Not all Facebook usage was connected to a longer life. Getting friend requests related to reduced mortality, but sending friend requests did not.

Similarly, posting photos and being tagged in photos was connected to living longer, but sending messages on Facebook was not. People who were tagged in many photos had the lowest mortality rates in the study.

Some diseases had a significant reduction of mortality with Facebook users. Deaths from infections, diabetes, mental illness or dementia, heart disease, stroke, other cardiovascular diseases, liver disease, and homicide all were significantly lower for Facebook users than for non-users.

Other causes of death did not show a relation to Facebook usage, including sexually transmitted diseases, several types of cancer, unintentional injuries, drug overdoses, and suicides.

Limitations of the Study

The study did not examine any other social media sites to see if using them prolonged life. Also, two of the researchers worked at Facebook while the study was being conducted.

William Hobbes, one of the researchers who was a postdoctorate fellow at Northeastern University, and co-author of the study, worked at Facebook as a research intern in 2013.

Hobbes said that Facebook agreed not to interfere with the research, no matter what the result was. But, he added, researchers "were pretty confident that we were going to find this result."

The researchers were careful to say that their results showed an associative relationship between using Facebook and living longer, not a causal one. In other words, researchers did not prove that using Facebook makes someone live longer. The study simply showed a connection between a longer life and some activities users do on Facebook.

The researchers say the findings may be able to help show how online social networks can help improve people's health on a global scale.

I'm Jonathan Evans.

For more information, you can read the entire study at PNAS: Online social integration is associated with reduced mortality risk.

Carolyn Nicander Mohr wrote this report for VOA Learning English. Kelly Jean Kelly was the editor.

Do you believe that using Facebook can help extend your life? Will you be tagging more friends in photos now? Do you think using other social media sites can also lead to living longer?

Share your thoughts in the Comments Section below or on testbig.com.

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Words in This Story

socialize - v. to talk to and do things with other people in a friendly way

mortality - n. the quality or state of being a person or thing that is alive and therefore certain to die : the quality or state of being mortal

dementia - n. a mental illness that causes someone to be unable to think clearly or to understand what is real and what is not real

cardiovascular - adj. of or relating to the heart and blood vessels

postdoctorate - adj. a postdoctorate student is an individual holding a doctoral degree who is engaged in mentored research and/or scholarly training for the purpose of acquiring the professional skills needed to pursue a career path of his or her choosing.

associative - adj. of or involving the action of associating ideas or things

causal - adj. relating to or showing the cause of something