Press "Enter" to skip to content

Happiness Linked to Longer Life

Being happy doesn’t just     improve the quality of your life.        According to a new study, it may      increase the quantity of your life as well. Older people were up to 35% less likely to die during the five-year study if they reported feeling happy, excited, and content on a typical day. And this was true even though the researchers took factors such as chronic health   problems, depression, and financial   security out of the equation.

“We had expected that we might see a link between how happy people felt over the day and their future mortality, but we were struck by how strong the effect was,” the lead author of the study and a professor of psychology at a University College.

Previous studies on happiness and longevity have largely relied on the participants’ ability to recall how they felt during a certain period of time in the past. These recollections aren’t always accurate, though, and to get around this problem more than 3,800 people to   record their levels of happiness, anxiety, and other emotions at four specific times over the course of a single day.

The participants, who were between the ages of 52 and 79 when the study began, were divided into three groups according to how happy and positive they felt. Although the groups differed slightly on some measures (such as age, wealth, and smoking), they were comparable in terms of ethnic makeup, education, employment status, and overall health.

Five years later, 7% of people in the least happy group had died,    compared with just 4% in the happiest group and 5% in the middle group.

When the researchers           controlled for age, depression, chronic diseases, health behaviors (such as   exercise and alcohol consumption), and socioeconomic factors, they found that the happiest and medium-happy people were 35% and 20% less likely to have died, respectively, than their gloomier counterparts.

It may seem far-fetched that a person’s feelings on one particular day would be able to predict the likelihood of dying in the near future, but these emotional snapshots have proven to be a good indication of overall temperament in previous studies.

“There is always room for  error, of course; if I get a parking ticket or stub my toe on the way to the study, I’m not going to be particularly happy.”

Unlike the happiness measures, depression symptoms were not         associated with mortality rates once the researchers adjusted for overall health. According to the study, this finding  suggests that the absence of happiness may be a more important measure of health in older people than the presence of negative emotions.

Positive emotions could       contribute to better physical health in a number of ways. Regions of the brain involved in happiness are also involved in blood-vessel function and              inflammation, for instance, and studies have shown that levels of the stress  hormone cortisol tend to rise and fall with emotion.

The study doesn’t prove that happiness (or unhappiness) directly  affects lifespan, but the findings do  imply that doctors and caregivers should pay close attention to the emotional well-being of older patients, the researchers say. “We would not advocate from this study that trying to be happier would have direct health benefits.

However, this study and others like it should help establish happiness as a legitimate area of concern for health professionals. “There are still some   people who see happiness as something fluffy and less scientific – not         something they should be worried about like, say, stress or depression.

Happiness, “may be something for doctors to ask their patients about.”

Job killing you? 8 types of work-related stress

The study, which was          published today in the Proceedings of the Academy of National Sciences,  included participants from a larger, long-running study on aging

 

Share This: