Pennsylvania State University
Young and middle-aged adults who live with chronic loneliness may be at risk for early cognitive decline, according to a new study by researchers in the Penn State Department of Human Development and Family Studies.
In a study published in BMC Public Health, the researchers demonstrated that young and middle-aged adults with chronic loneliness did not show improvements on cognitive assessments, while their peers who were not chronically lonely did improve on those same assessments.
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