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Stress Stamina Can Help
Predict Health Risk
HELSINKI (Reuters) - A person's
ability to cope with stress may help doctors predict their risk
of heart and blood vessel disease, a Finnish study found.
New findings from a study begun over 20 years ago by five Finnish
universities showed that a combination of a demanding family environment,
dissatisfied parents and a temperament that copes poorly with
stress raised the risk of physical illness.
The study of 3,600 people linking physical and psychological
factors to heart and blood vessel, or vascular, diseases is the
longest of its kind, said Liisa Keltikangas-Jarvinen, a professor
of psychology at the University of Helsinki.
``A person's temperament determines what he considers stress
and how he reacts or what kinds of physical reactions emerge during
stress,'' Keltikangas-Jarvinen told a news conference.
While stress had been considered a factor in the illness for
a long time, the concept of stress had been vague, she said.
``Temperament has not earlier been seen as a risk factor (of
heart and vascular diseases),'' Keltikangas-Jarvinen said.
Innate temperament, or the way people deal with situations, also
explained why the same things were a challenge for some and a
pain for others, and why in the same stressful situation some
people got ill but others grew stronger.
``One cannot say what kind of stress is physiologically dangerous
for people. It is how they feel the stress which determines whether
they will get ill or not,'' she said.
An easily stressed person brought up in a stress-causing environment
had an increased risk of falling ill with heart and vascular disease,
Keltikangas-Jarvinen said.
One risk factor was a family environment where the child did
not get emotional support, where he or she was not accepted, and
where goals set for the child were extremely high.
Further risks were parents who were not satisfied with their
lives--such as career-oriented mothers who had cold and distant
relationships with their children--and who compensated for this
dissatisfaction by working hard, she said.
There were also differences between the sexes on what kind of
temperament types were risky and what were not, the findings indicate.
Women who were dependent on social support did well but men who
needed positive feedback were unable to see the physical warning
signs their bodies were sending them during stress and faced a
greater risk of heart disease.
Perfectionism was a risk factor for women but was not a problem
for men, the investigators also found.
Reference
Source 89
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