This study examines the possibility that social support operates as a moderator of cardiovas-cular reactivity, which may be a factor in the development of heart disease and hypertension. An experiment was performed in which each of 40 subjects was the object of verbal attack in a discussion of a controversial issue. In each session, one subject and three confederates participated. Two of the confederates argued with the subject; in half the groups, a third confederate defended the subject's position (social support condition); in the other half, the third confederate sat quietly (no support condition). The subject's blood pressure and heart rate were continuously monitored. Subjects in the social support condition showed significa...
Social support has been reliably related to lower rates of morbidity and mortality. An im-portant is...
The current research examined the effects of text-messaged and in-person social support on cardiovas...
The aim of the current study was to examine how thinking about qualitatively different social networ...
Social support has been associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) morbidity and mortality. Cardio...
Social support has been associated with reduced mortality and morbidity from a number of causes. To...
Purpose: The stress‐buffering hypothesis (Cohen & McKay, 1984, Handbook of psychology and health IV...
Epidemiological studies have suggested that social support may offer a protective role for cardiova...
Research demonstrates that cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) predicts hypertension and contributes to ...
Introduction. The present research examines the utility and validity of social support - that aspect...
This study tested two hypotheses of associations between dimensions of social connectedness and card...
Background Exaggerated cardiovascular reactions to psychological stress are considered a risk factor...
Research by James J. Lynch and his colleagues demonstrates that as people speak, their blood pressur...
peer-reviewedBackground: Exaggerated cardiovascular reactions to psychological stress are considered...
he pathways linking giving and receiving emotional and instrumental social support, and cardiovascul...
Theoretical and empirical work suggests that social support is an important predictor of both psycho...
Social support has been reliably related to lower rates of morbidity and mortality. An im-portant is...
The current research examined the effects of text-messaged and in-person social support on cardiovas...
The aim of the current study was to examine how thinking about qualitatively different social networ...
Social support has been associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) morbidity and mortality. Cardio...
Social support has been associated with reduced mortality and morbidity from a number of causes. To...
Purpose: The stress‐buffering hypothesis (Cohen & McKay, 1984, Handbook of psychology and health IV...
Epidemiological studies have suggested that social support may offer a protective role for cardiova...
Research demonstrates that cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) predicts hypertension and contributes to ...
Introduction. The present research examines the utility and validity of social support - that aspect...
This study tested two hypotheses of associations between dimensions of social connectedness and card...
Background Exaggerated cardiovascular reactions to psychological stress are considered a risk factor...
Research by James J. Lynch and his colleagues demonstrates that as people speak, their blood pressur...
peer-reviewedBackground: Exaggerated cardiovascular reactions to psychological stress are considered...
he pathways linking giving and receiving emotional and instrumental social support, and cardiovascul...
Theoretical and empirical work suggests that social support is an important predictor of both psycho...
Social support has been reliably related to lower rates of morbidity and mortality. An im-portant is...
The current research examined the effects of text-messaged and in-person social support on cardiovas...
The aim of the current study was to examine how thinking about qualitatively different social networ...