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Journal ArticleDOI

Divorce and Death A Meta-Analysis and Research Agenda for Clinical, Social, and Health Psychology

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TLDR
This review integrates research on divorce and death via meta-analysis and outlines a research agenda for better understanding the potential mechanisms linking marital dissolution and risk for all-cause mortality.
Abstract
Divorce is a relatively common stressful life event that is purported to increase risk for all-cause mortality. One problem in the literature on divorce and health is that it is fragmented and spread across many disciplines; most prospective studies of mortality are based in epidemiology and sociology, whereas most mechanistic studies are based in psychology. This review integrates research on divorce and death via meta-analysis and outlines a research agenda for better understanding the potential mechanisms linking marital dissolution and risk for all-cause mortality. Random effects meta-analysis with a sample of 32 prospective studies (involving more than 6.5 million people, 160,000 deaths, and over 755,000 divorces in 11 different countries) revealed a significant increase in risk for early death among separated/divorced adults in comparison to their married counterparts. Men and younger adults evidenced significantly greater risk for early death following marital separation/divorce than did women and older adults. Quantification of the overall effect size linking marital separation/divorce to risk for early death reveals a number of important research questions, and this article discusses what remains to be learned about four plausible mechanisms of action: social selection, resource disruptions, changes in health behaviors, and chronic psychological distress.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Marital quality and health: A meta-analytic review.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of published empirical articles describing associations between marital relationship quality and physical health in more than 72,000 individuals found little evidence for gender differences in studies that explicitly tested gender moderation, with the exception of surrogate endpoint studies.
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Online Dating A Critical Analysis From the Perspective of Psychological Science

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The Case for Marriage: Why Married People Are Happier, Healthier, and Better off Financially

TL;DR: The case for marriage is discussed in this article, where the authors argue that marriage is a "bargain," a superior investment benefiting both those who participate and society at large.
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Advancing Social Connection as a Public Health Priority in the United States

TL;DR: Current evidence on social relationships and health is evaluated according to criteria commonly used in determining public health priorities and an agenda for integrating social relationships into current public health priority is outlined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Social Relationships Are Important for Physical Health: A Systems Approach to Understanding and Modifying Risk and Protection

TL;DR: This review presents existing evidence indicating that the authors' social connections to others have powerful influences on health and longevity and that lacking social connection qualifies as a risk factor for premature mortality.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Bias in meta-analysis detected by a simple, graphical test

TL;DR: Funnel plots, plots of the trials' effect estimates against sample size, are skewed and asymmetrical in the presence of publication bias and other biases Funnel plot asymmetry, measured by regression analysis, predicts discordance of results when meta-analyses are compared with single large trials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Meta-Analysis in Clinical Trials*

TL;DR: This paper examines eight published reviews each reporting results from several related trials in order to evaluate the efficacy of a certain treatment for a specified medical condition and suggests a simple noniterative procedure for characterizing the distribution of treatment effects in a series of studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Meta-analysis of observational studies in epidemiology - A proposal for reporting

TL;DR: A checklist contains specifications for reporting of meta-analyses of observational studies in epidemiology, including background, search strategy, methods, results, discussion, and conclusion should improve the usefulness ofMeta-an analyses for authors, reviewers, editors, readers, and decision makers.

Regression models and life tables (with discussion

David Cox
TL;DR: The drum mallets disclosed in this article are adjustable, by the percussion player, as to balance, overall weight, head characteristics and tone production of the mallet, whereby the adjustment can be readily obtained.
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