Being popular can be healthy or unhealthy: stress, social network diversity, and incidence of upper respiratory infection

HIGHLIGHTS

  • who: BRIEF REPORTS and collaborators from the Mellon University have published the research: Being Popular Can Be Healthy or Unhealthy: Stress, Social Network Diversity, and Incidence of Upper Respiratory Infection, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
  • what: The main reason for nonparticipation was not appearing for scheduled appointments (85%); the other nonparticipants (15%) had difficulty with catheterization (blood taken as part of a reactivity protocol not reported here). Because the results of these three analyses were virtually identical, the authors report the results of the last (most conservative). Together, these techniques eliminate the possibility that the associations . . .

     

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