A landmark study that followed more than 300,000 people across 148 separate research projects found that strong social relationships increased the odds of survival by 50 percent. The effect size is comparable to quitting smoking. We hear a lot about not smoking. We hear almost nothing about loneliness as a public health crisis, even though the science says it's in the same league.
In Better Together, Dr. Patricia A. Farrell examines what decades of research in neuroscience, immunology, psychology, and epidemiology have revealed about the biology of human connection. You'll find out what actually happens in your body when you feel truly seen by another person, why loneliness is technically a physical wound with measurable consequences for your cardiovascular system and immune function, and how the specific chemicals released during genuine connection change the way your body handles stress, pain, and disease.
The book covers the social brain, the healing power of touch, the science behind friendship and family as medicine, what community does for the body at a biological level, the honest truth about what digital connection does and doesn't provide, how connection heals trauma, the health effects of companion animals, and how to build the kind of relationships that translate into measurable biological benefit.
This is not a book telling you to make more friends. It's a book about why your biology has been waiting for connection all along, what it does with it when you provide it, and what happens to your body when you don't.
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