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Related: About this forumOptimism Lengthens Life, Harvard Study Finds. Women with Positive Outlook, Longevity
- Lifestyle factors, such as regular exercise and healthy eating, accounted for less than a quarter of the optimism-lifespan association in the study, indicating that other factors may be at play. -
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- 'Optimism lengthens life, study finds,' Harvard Gazette, Harvard Chan School Communications, June 8, 2022. Ed.
Women who reported positive outlook were likelier to live past 90, regardless of race. Optimism lengthens life, study finds. Good genes are nice, but joy is better. Longevity starts when were young. Higher levels of optimism were associated with longer lifespans and living beyond age 90 in women across racial and ethnic groups in a study led by researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Although optimism itself may be affected by social structural factors, such as race and ethnicity, our research suggests that the benefits of optimism may hold across diverse groups, said the studys lead author, Hayami Koga, a Ph.D. student in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences studying in the Population Health Sciences program in partnership with Harvard Chan School. A lot of previous work has focused on deficits or risk factors that increase the risks for diseases and premature death. Our findings suggest that theres value to focusing on positive psychological factors, like optimism, as possible new ways of promoting longevity and healthy aging across diverse groups.
The study was published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. In a previous study, the research group determined that optimism was linked to a longer lifespan and exceptional longevity, which was defined as living beyond 85 years of age. Because they had looked at mostly white populations in that previous study, Koga and her colleagues broadened the participant pool in the current study to include women from across racial and ethnic groups. According to Koga, including diverse populations in research is important to public health because these groups have higher mortality rates than white populations, and there is limited research about them to help inform health policy decisions.
For this study, the researchers analyzed data and survey responses from 159,255 participants in the Womens Health Initiative, which included postmenopausal women in the U.S. The women enrolled at ages 50-79 from 1993 to 1998 and were followed for up to 26 years. Of the participants, the 25% who were the most optimistic were likely to have a 5.4% longer lifespan and a 10% greater likelihood of living beyond 90 years than the 25% who were the least optimistic. The researchers also found no interaction between optimism and any categories of race and ethnicity, and these trends held true after taking into account demographics, chronic conditions, and depression...
- More, https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2022/06/optimism-lengthens-life-study-finds/
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Optimism Lengthens Life, Harvard Study Finds. Women with Positive Outlook, Longevity (Original Post)
appalachiablue
Jun 2022
OP
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,730 posts)1. No real surprise, although it's nice to read
the verification.
I have always been an optimistic and upbeat person. I'm also extremely healthy, which of course helps me to be happy and optimistic.
Most of my life I've been astonished at how many people seem to revel in ill health, or problems of any kind.
appalachiablue
(42,927 posts)4. Keep up the good attitude. I think peoples' disposition
and outlook are evident early in life and influenced by biology and environment naturally.
OverBurn
(1,090 posts)2. I should drop dead anytime, I'm mid 50's and very pessimistic.
appalachiablue
(42,927 posts)3. Ha, brutal honesty but maybe work on that. I'm not
exactly sunny all of the time either. Yet my hope for a better way of life and world remains steady.
Duppers
(28,247 posts)5. Same here!
But I'm in my 70's now. Given my lack of optimism, I may die any day now.
appalachiablue
(42,927 posts)6. Kicking