Background: Exaggerated cardiovascular reactions to psychological stress are considered
a risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity. Social support may reduce such risk by
attenuating cardiovascular reactivity to stress. Purpose: To examine the effects of three
independent social support variables and their interaction on cardiovascular reactivity to
acute stress. The variables were stranger or friend presence; active supportive or passive
presence, and male or female presence. Methods: Cardiovascular reactions to mental
arithmetic stress were measured in 112 healthy young women tested in one of eight
distinct independent conditions: active supportive male friend; active supportive female
friend, passive male friend; passive female friend; active supportive male stranger; active
supportive female stranger, passive male stranger; and passive female stranger. Results:
Support from a friend rather than a stranger was associated with attenuated blood
pressure reactivity, but only when the supporter was a male friend. Support from a male
stranger or female friend was associated with augmented blood pressure reactivity.
Conclusions: This interaction between the intimacy and sex of the supporter on
cardiovascular reactivity extends the findings of previous laboratory studies of social
support and can, to an extent, be interpreted in terms of Social Comparison Theory.
History
Publication
Annals of Behavioral Medicine;37, pp. 38-45
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Note
peer-reviewed
Rights
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com