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Friday, November 21, 2008 - 1:01 PM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. Small-town America has a life-enhancing lesson for people who are at
least 50 years old: Individuals, those in the heartland's middle class,
anyway, who have a positive outlook about aging live around 7� years
longer than those who take a dim view of their prospects as seniors. http://louis_j_sheehan.today.com/
"People
who have positive views about themselves as they age somehow cope with
society's negative attitudes toward the elderly," says psychologist
Becca R. Levy of Yale University. "These individuals' positive
self-perceptions also can prolong their lives." http://louis_j_sheehan.today.com/
The longevity
advantage measured is nothing to sneeze at. It exceeds the 1 to 4 years
of added life linked to traits such as having low systolic blood
pressure, low cholesterol, moderate body weight, and no history of
cigarette smoking. The 7�-year survival edge for seniors with an
upbeat attitude toward aging remained after the researchers
statistically accounted for age, sex, income, loneliness, and physical
capability to engage in household and social activities. http://louis_j_sheehan.today.com/
The new study appears in the August Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. Levy
and her coworkers tapped into data collected in 1975 by other
researchers from 338 men and 322 women, ages 50 to 94, living in a
small Ohio town. Those data included five items that probed attitudes
toward aging. Participants reported the extent to which they agreed or
disagreed with statements such as, "As you get older, you are less
useful" and "I have as much pep as I did last year." According to
mortality data gathered until 1998, participants citing positive views
toward their advancing years lived substantially longer than those with
negative views did. Levy's group also found that a person's "will
to live" provides part of the explanation of the link between survival
and self-perceptions of aging. The researchers determined individuals'
will to live from their reports of feeling "empty" or "full,"
"hopeless" or "hopeful," and "worthless" or "worthy." No differences in
the will to live emerged among groups of people who were employees,
housewives, or retirees. The link between attitude toward aging
and survival may also reflect elevated physiological reactions to
stress among people with negative views, Levy theorizes. The
strength of the new link is "surprising and intriguing," remarks
psychologist Heiner Maier of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic
Research in Rostock, Germany. Maier and his colleagues have found a
weaker but still statistically significant survival advantage for
Berlin residents, ages 70 and up, who reported being satisfied with
their lives.
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