Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Feel young and live longer

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Dec, 2014 11:40 AM
    Feeling younger than the actual age might be good for older people, say British researchers.
     
    They found that older people who feel three or more years younger than their age had a lower death rate compared to those who even felt they are a year older than their actual age.
     
    While examining the relationship between self-perceived age and mortality, the team from University College London found that self-perceived age can reflect assessments of health, physical limitation and well-being in later life and many older people feel younger than their actual age.
     
    To reach this conclusion, authors Isla Rippon and Andrew Steptoe used data from a study on aging and included 6,489 individuals, whose average chronological age was 65.8 years but whose average self-perceived age was 56.8 years.
     
    Most of the adults (69.6 percent) felt three or more years younger than their actual age.
     
    While 25.6 percent had a self-perceived age close to their real age, 4.8 percent felt more than a year older than their chronological age.
     
    Mortality rates during an average follow-up of 99 months were 14.3 percent in adults who felt younger, 18.5 percent in those who felt about their actual age and 24.6 percent in those adults who felt older, according to the study results.
     
    The relationship between self-perceived age and cardiovascular death was strong but there was no association between self-perceived age and cancer death.
     
    "Individuals who feel older than their actual age could be targeted with health messages promoting positive health behaviour and attitude towards aging," the authors said.
     
    The research paper was published online in the Journal of the American Medical Association's publication Internal Medicine.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions

    Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions
    The research on animals showed how intermittent fasting in rats and mice can enhance learning and memory and decrease the risk of degeneration of those...

    Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions

    Permanent stress may lead to mental disorders

    Permanent stress may lead to mental disorders
    Permanent stress can activate immune cells that can cause changes in the brain, leading to mental disorders such as schizophrenia, shows a study....

    Permanent stress may lead to mental disorders

    How flawed gene can cause deafness

    How flawed gene can cause deafness
    Researchers have found how mutations in a gene called Tmie can cause deafness from birth, suggesting new avenues for therapies aimed at restoring hearing....

    How flawed gene can cause deafness

    Obesity silently damages heart

    Obesity silently damages heart
    Obese people without an overt manifestation of heart disease experience silent cardiac damage that fuels risk of heart failure in the future, with new research...

    Obesity silently damages heart

    Trans fats bad for brain too

    Trans fats bad for brain too
    Every gram of dietary trans fatty acids consumed in a day was linked with 0.76 fewer words recalled, which means 11 fewer words recalled with...

    Trans fats bad for brain too

    Sleep-deprived schoolchildren run obesity risk

    Sleep-deprived schoolchildren run obesity risk
    Children of mothers who work full time may not be getting the amount of sleep they need each night, placing them at higher risk of being overweight or obese...

    Sleep-deprived schoolchildren run obesity risk