Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Arguments in social circle may double your death risk: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 May, 2014 02:17 PM
    Do you often fight with partners, relatives and friends on trivial matters? Stop this immediately as frequent arguments in family or in neighbourhood may double the risk of death from any cause in middle age.
     
    Frequent conflicts with anyone in the social circle are associated with a doubling to tripling in the risk of death from any cause compared with participants who said these incidents were rare, the study showed.
     
    Men seemed to be particularly vulnerable to the worries and demands generated by their female partners.
     
    To prove their point, the Danish researchers quizzed almost 10,000 men and women aged 36 to 52 about their everyday social relationships.
     
    The researchers focused particularly on who, among partners, children, other relatives, friends and neighbours, made excess demands, prompted worries, or was a source of conflict, and how often these arose.
     
    They also considered whether having a job made any difference.
     
    The health of the study participants was tracked from 2000 to the end of 2011, using data from the Danish Cause of Death Registry.
     
    Between 2000 and 2011, 196 women (4 percent) and 226 men (6 percent) died.
     
    Almost half the deaths were from cancer, while heart disease/stroke, liver disease, and accidents and suicide made up the rest.
     
    Around one in 10 study participants said that their partner or children were a frequent or constant source of excess demands and worries; around one in 20 (6 percent) and a further 2 percent claimed this for relatives and friends, respectively.
     
    Similarly, 6 percent had frequent arguments with their partner or children, 2 percent with other relatives, and 1 percent with friends or neighbours, the research revealed.
     
    Constant arguing seemed to be the most harmful for health.
     
    Being out of work seemed to amplify the negative impact of social relationship stressors.
     
    “The evidence suggests that supportive social networks and strong relationships are good for general health and wellbeing,” the researchers noted in a paper appeared in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    10 jobs which involve no actual work

    10 jobs which involve no actual work
    Music lovers paid a small fortune to a rock singer Ted Nugent NOT to sing at their local festival the other day. Officials booked the screaming rocker but Texas residents paid $16,200 for him to shut up and stay away.

    10 jobs which involve no actual work

    World's oldest weather report found in Egypt

    World's oldest weather report found in Egypt
    If you thought weather prediction was a recent phenomenon, you would be in for a surprise if told that weather prediction was done in ancient Egypt some 3,500 years ago!

    World's oldest weather report found in Egypt

    Lost jet: 'Most difficult search in history' continues

    Lost jet: 'Most difficult search in history' continues
    The search for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 ended for the day Thursday with no sightings made in the search area in the southern Indian Ocean yet again and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the search operation is "the most difficult in human history".

    Lost jet: 'Most difficult search in history' continues

    Go and vote: UN official to Afghans

    Go and vote: UN official to Afghans
    A senior UN official Thursday urged Afghans to use the presidential and provincial council elections two days hence to shape the future of the country through peaceful, democratic means.

    Go and vote: UN official to Afghans

    Lost jet: Passengers cleared of suspicion, search continues

    Lost jet: Passengers cleared of suspicion, search continues
    No sightings were reported at the conclusion of Wednesday's search operation in the southern Indian Ocean for the “lost” Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 even as a senior Malaysian official said that all passengers on board the jet have been “cleared” in a criminal investigation that is being conducted.

    Lost jet: Passengers cleared of suspicion, search continues

    Britain closes military headquarters in Afghanistan

    Britain closes military headquarters in Afghanistan
    Britain's military headquarters in Helmand province of southern Afghanistan has been disbanded after eight years of frontline operations, the British defence ministry announced Wednesday.

    Britain closes military headquarters in Afghanistan