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Researchers
Report Key Aging Gene
You
may think that you can't teach an old dog new tricks. But a new
study says people can take control of their lives, even at 50,
and age well.
Aging creeps
up on you throughout your life but one day it seems like it suddenly
happened. When that time comes, the choices you have made in life
become very stark and often seem irreversible.
But new study
says people can make choices to significantly change the quality
of their life, even at age 50. Harvard researchers embarked on
an unprecedented study tracking the physical and mental
health of 724 men as they aged over a 60-year period.
They found
that if the men figured out a way to be happy, fit and emotionally
stable by the age of 50, they lived to be older, happy and fit
seniors. The researchers called them "successful."
The study,
"Successful Aging" appears in the June journal of the American
Psychiatric Association.
Personal
Control Key
"We found
that it was a matter of personal control," said Kenneth Mukamal,
instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School.
"Important
factors that are under people's control that they can use to live
a longer, happier and physically comfortable life was to not smoke,
not abuse alcohol, be in a warm and stable marriage, have mature
and adult coping mechanisms, maintain an appropriate weight and
get some exercise."
While the
researchers suspected that these factors made a difference, the
believe control may matter more than even genetic predisposition.
"An active
and happy old age may lie not so much in our stars and genes as
in ourselves," says lead author George E. Valliant, who teaches
psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.
"We often
hear we will live as long as our parents and so on," Mukamal said.
"But it doesn't feel like it has to be that way."
Longest
Continuous Study of Health
The study
began in 1940 and is the longest continuous study of mental and
physical health in the world. It contrasted the mental and physical
health of 268 Harvard sophomores with 456 socially disadvantaged
inner-city adolescents. Participants underwent physical and psychological
exams and answered questionnaires every two years.
The study
found that the health of the inner city men declined more rapidly
than did the health of the Harvard men. In fact, the inner city
men's health at the age of 65 matched the health of the Harvard
graduates at the age of 75.
Education
Plays Role
Education,
not money and prestige is a major factor in aging successfully,
the authors also note. The health of 25 inner-city men who obtained
a college education was similar to the Harvard graduates.
"It's not
a Harvard education that makes you age successful," Mukamal said.
"It's an education."
Reference
Source 104
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