I couldnt work out how they came to the 56% figure.
researchers found people considered lonely at the start of the study had a 25% higher risk of stroke than those not considered lonely.
Researchers found that adults aged 50 and above who experienced chronic loneliness had a 56% higher risk of stroke than those who consistently reported not being lonely.
How many actually had a stroke?
How many died of stroke because they lived alone and had nobody around to contact emmergency services?
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[ 2.4 ms ] story [ 16.9 ms ] threadI couldnt work out how they came to the 56% figure.
researchers found people considered lonely at the start of the study had a 25% higher risk of stroke than those not considered lonely.
Researchers found that adults aged 50 and above who experienced chronic loneliness had a 56% higher risk of stroke than those who consistently reported not being lonely.
How many actually had a stroke?
How many died of stroke because they lived alone and had nobody around to contact emmergency services?