Evidence
consistently demonstrates that social support—contact and relationships
with others—plays an important part in health maintenance. Research
shows that positive social connections help keep patients alive longer
after heart attacks, help stave off depression and dementia, and may
even help lower the incidence of, and mortality from, cancer. Social
isolation, on the other hand, can increase stress, bringing on illness
and making recovery more difficult.
Given the role of
social networks in patient health, it’s important to check a patient’s
social support system along with his or her vital signs. Asking
questions about a patient’s social life may seem intrusive and
time-consuming to many doctors, but the value of an intact social
network is so high that it’s worth learning the skills to check for
social support in routine primary care and to help isolated patients
foster connections.
The Evidence
In a 1995 review of 20 years of research on the issue, Harvard social
epidemiologist Lisa Berkman, PhD, found that “people who are isolated
are at increased mortality risk from a number of causes. . . . Recent
studies indicate that social support is particularly related to
survival after myocardial infarction.”
The
connection between poor social support and poor recovery from heart
attack is complex, but it may well be depression. Depression is
associated with a three- to fourfold increase in cardiac mortality
within 18 months of a heart attack, according to studies by
Frasure-Smith et al. published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1993 and Circulation
in 1995. The same researchers examined depression and social support in
887 MI patients, and their results (published in the April 2000 issue
of Circulation) linked social isolation and depression with
mortality. Interestingly, however, the study showed that social
isolation was generally not closely linked with depression, although
being married or living with others did lessen the likelihood of
depression. While social networks weren’t found to prevent depression,
the study did find that depressed patients who had high levels of
social support were less likely to experience a depression-related
increase in post-MI mortality. The project also identified three
factors that helped mitigate depression: a higher perception of social
support, more close friends and relatives with whom the patient had
regular monthly contact, and living with one or more persons. “Very
high levels of support appear to buffer the impact of depression on
mortality,” the researchers wrote.
When they lack close
relationships, older people particularly are at risk for depression,
dementia, and entry into a nursing home. A Swedish study published in
the April 15th issue of the Lancet followed approximately 1,200
elderly people without dementia for an average of three years, and
found that those with a limited or poor social network had a 60%
increased risk of developing dementia. And a 1994 study examining more
than 2,800 elderly people in New Haven, CT, previously confirmed the
common-sense conclusion that those who enjoyed regular contact in a
close family network were less likely to enter nursing homes.
Research published last year in Health Psychology
found a possible connection between social isolation and cancer: the
study showed that men with high levels of stress and poor social
support had increased levels of prostate-specific antigen in their
blood—and thereby an increased risk of prostate cancer.
In an editorial published last year in JAMA,
David Spiegel, MD, of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences at Stanford University School of Medicine, summarized the
overwhelming value of social support in improving and maintaining
health. “Being well integrated socially reduces all-cause age-adjusted
mortality by . . . twofold, about as much as having low-versus-high
serum cholesterol levels or being a nonsmoker,” he wrote.
How Support May Promote Health
Social support is important during acute health crises and for
long-term health and survival, although investigators aren’t certain
why the body mends more effectively and maintains wellness better when
the patient is closely connected with an empathetic friend or relative.
“There’s a fair amount of agreement that having someone close to you
providing emotional support is very helpful in the recovery process,”
says Carlos Mendes de Leon, PhD, an associate professor of internal and
preventive medicine at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center in
Chicago.
The
effect has been shown in recoveries from heart attacks, strokes, and
hip fractures, among other health crises. Researchers speculate that
emotional support in a time of crisis calms the patient, reducing the
stress that can prompt harmful physiological responses. Relaxation can
boost immune and neuroendocrine system responses that support healing,
Mendes de Leon suggests. According to Arthur Stone, PhD, professor of
psychiatry at the State University of New York in Stony Brook, the
biological response involves a feedback loop between the brain and the
body. “Social factors influence biological factors and vice versa,”
Stone explains. “When our brain produces certain types of hormones and
activates organs . . . the organs produce their own chemical mediators
that go back up to the brain. Everything’s influencing everything else.”
A
sense of embeddedness, or belonging, may also have an impact on
longevity. “On a day-to-day basis we may not need the presence of
someone to whom we want to convey our deepest worries and fears,” says
Mendes de Leon, “but the improved longevity may be a function of ‘How
much do I feel integrated in my social environment?’ The feeling of
some social embeddedness is important to the health of older people.”
Having
friends can also motivate people to remain physically active, and the
research suggests that those with more diverse social networks
generally take better care of themselves: they smoke less, exercise
more, and sleep better, says Sheldon Cohen, PhD, professor of
psychology at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.
Patients
being treated for HIV fare better when they have a network of friends
and others to support them, perhaps because they’re more likely to take
their medicine when others are there to remind them, says Sheryl L.
Catz, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral medicine at
the Medical College of Wisconsin. Catz was lead author of a paper
examining HIV patients and their social networks. “Our findings suggest
that patients with limited emotional support should receive mental
health and support services not only to improve psychological
functioning but also, potentially, to enhance treatment adherence.”
An intriguing study of Cohen’s published in 1997 in JAMA
showed that healthy volunteers exposed to a common-cold virus were less
likely to get sick if they had a diverse social network. The finding
could not be explained by the subjects’ health habits alone, such as
smoking, sleeping poorly, or low vitamin C intake.
“At
this point we’ve been unable to clearly identify what the difference is
either biologically or psychologically that made the subjects
healthier,” Cohen says. “These aren’t easy connections to make,” he
says, noting that “it took us 10 to 12 years to make a plausible
connection between stress and colds.”
Although Cohen is
reluctant to make certain claims about the physiological mechanisms
involved, he says the evidence clearly shows that social isolation puts
patients at risk, and that part of primary care should be attending to
a patient’s social networks. “A clinician certainly could encourage
patients to participate in groups, whether through social activities or
religious groups or spending more time with friends,” he suggests.
Opening the Discussion
Given the tendency for patients to change doctors more often and for
office visits to be shorter than in the past, it may be harder than
ever to make social integration part of primary care. “I don’t think
physicians believe social support is not important,” says Kim Marvel,
PhD, educational associate director for the Family Practice Residency
Program in Fort Collins, CO. “It’s just not on the radar screen in a
typical patient interview.”
Marvel,
who has studied physician-patient interaction extensively, says doctors
or patients raise the topic of social support in office visits only
about 15% of the time.
The greatest concern of physicians
is probably that they won’t have time for an extended discussion of the
patient’s emotional life. “The doctor thinks, ‘If I do ask those
questions, I may open up a can of worms, and it’s going to take me a
long time to have that discussion,’” Marvel says.
But
allowing a patient the opportunity to discuss social and emotional
issues enables primary care doctors to find out whether an isolation
issue will interfere with treatment and, if it will, to suggest an
intervention such as a support group or a referral to a counselor.
Furthermore, the simple act of discussing the issue with a doctor may
make the patient feel better.
It’s possible to open up
such a discussion without taking on more than can be handled in an
office visit, Marvel says. He suggests using the BATHE technique,
outlined by Marian R. Stuart and Joseph A. Lieberman III in The Fifteen Minute Hour,
a book that adapts psychotherapy techniques to brief primary care
encounters. BATHE stands for background, affect, trouble, handling, and
empathy.
The technique involves asking the patient an
open-ended question, such as, “What is going on in your life,” and
listening attentively and supportively to the patient’s response. Pay
attention to the patient’s affect, or mood. Is she depressed, lonely,
or anxious? If so, focus the discussion on what is bothering her. Find
out how she is coping with or handling the situation, ensuring that she
has someone to support her emotionally. Finally, empathize with her by
acknowledging how she’s feeling. The BATHE technique provides an
opportunity for a brief, focused interview over which the practitioner
maintains control.
“In my experience, when physicians use
this set of structured questions, they feel a little more in control
even though they’re exploring the psychosocial realm,” says Marvel. “It
won’t be an endless discussion, and yet you get to that issue of
whether the patient is coping and handling the problem.”
Physicians
can also simply offer an empathetic ear. “The most therapeutic part of
this approach is having somebody listen,” says Marvel. “That’s more
important than offering the patient a solution.”
Physicians
can limit their inquiries about social support to patients with
problems or symptoms that suggest social isolation is an issue, such as
patients who schedule frequent appointments—particularly for
unexplained physical problems—and those who are depressed or have
chronic illness.
Another way, short of an in-depth
interview, to find out if patients are isolated is to include a couple
of questions about social support on the patient intake form or
questionnaire. Furthermore, reception staff and nurses often have
casual conversations with patients, and they can be instructed to pass
along relevant information about patients who might need extra help.
How to Help Isolated Patients
If you’ve determined that a patient is depressed or lonely, what can be
done? It may sound flip, but to some extent, you can prescribe a social
life. Marvel tells of some doctors who will write on a prescription
pad, “Call a friend once a week.”
Another
technique is to encourage patients to bring an advocate—a friend or
relative—along on medical appointments. “In the past some physicians
have seen that as a nuisance,” says Carolina Yahne, PhD, a psychology
professor and research associate at the University of New Mexico Center
on Alcoholism, Substance Abuse, and Addiction. “But the physician who
encourages that . . . can elicit the support of the patient’s help
network.”
Other recommendations a doctor can make include the following:
- Refer the patient to a support group focused on his chronic illness or age group.
- Suggest talking with a counselor, social worker, or minister.
- Recommend getting a pet.
- Ask about religious affiliation and contacts in the patient’s religious community.
- Offer a follow-up appointment to further discuss the problem.
It’s
useful to keep on hand listings of social support resources in the
community so an easy referral can be made. For instance, have a list of
community agencies that deal with the elderly, including adult day care
programs, legal and housing assistance, and Medicare counseling. Keep
extra copies that the physician or office staff can hand to patients
who need help.
Draw on Other Professionals
Another time-efficient way to check on social support is to establish a
formal relationship with a licensed social worker. Increasing numbers
of primary care practices are hiring a social worker for quick
down-the-hall referrals, or are setting up referral relationships with
social workers in the community, says Rita Webb, senior staff associate
for the National Association of Social Workers.
Shorter
stays in the hospital and increasing evidence that patients’ social
needs affect their health have made connections between primary care
physicians and social workers more important, Webb says. She adds,
“This has put a major strain on primary care doctors to try to ensure
that patients get the needed support to improve their health and
recover from illness.”
The pressure has been particularly
intense on medical groups in urban, inner-city areas where patients
tend to have more psychosocial problems and high-risk behaviors, such
as poor housing, smoking, and substance abuse.
Social
workers can provide patients with education, links to community
resources, emotional support, coping skills for life-threatening
medical conditions, psychological counseling, and support for their
family members.
Many primary care doctors are more
comfortable making a referral to a licensed social worker because they
feel uncomfortable probing into a patient’s personal life, Webb says.
“I’ve worked with residents on biopsychosocial issues, and there is a
high level of discomfort. They wonder, ‘How do I raise these
questions?’”
In her own work with primary care practices,
Webb has often heard patients and their families say that they felt
intimidated and were discouraged from asking the doctor medical
questions. “I would come back to the doctor to follow up and he’d say,
‘I didn’t have a clue they didn’t get what they needed,’” Webb relates.
“The physician would feel a lot of relief knowing that what he or she
had said was explained the best it could be and that follow-up was
being done.”
Some practices find it worthwhile to pool
their money and hire a social worker. Increasingly, insurance plans are
paying for the behavioral counseling related to medical diagnoses such
as heart disease and other chronic illnesses. Another option is to
refer patients to independent licensed clinical social workers who will
bill for their services separately.
One often-overlooked
resource for physicians is the patient’s spiritual network,
psychologist Yahne says, whether it’s a formal church or simply the
patient’s own belief in prayer. “Physicians have traditionally not
called on that,” she says.
Referral to other
professionals—social workers, psychologists, and clergy, for
instance—can be lifesavers for busy primary care doctors. “You need to
call in everything you’ve got,” Yahne says.
Professionals
aren’t the only ones who can help. Soliciting the help of family
members, and encouraging them to visit a hospitalized patient, is also
helpful, says Mendes de Leon. “You can positively reinforce that to the
family and say, ‘It’s great you can come to visit, and I’m sure the
patient appreciates it,’” he suggests. “Those kinds of simple remarks
can go a long way.”
For a busy primary care doctor,
remembering to keep apprised of a patient’s social connectedness may be
difficult, but researchers say it’s worthwhile. “We have to start
teaching primary care physicians, or at least making them aware that
this kind of emotional support is important to patients,” Mendes de
Leon contends. “It doesn’t take a lot of time or a lot of expertise.
Quickly checking on the emotional status of your patient is only the
humane thing to do.”