Contact: Rachel Champeau
(310) 794-2270
rchampeau@support.ucla.edu.
SUPPORTIVE SPOUSE, FAMILY, FRIENDS CONTRIBUTE TO 'SUCCESSFUL
AGING'
Friends, family and positive experiences accumulate over a lifetime
to help counteract the normal wear and tear of life, according to
a new study in the May/June issue of Psychosomatic Medicine.
Men and women who had good childhoods and good marriages scored
considerably better on a measure of aging that includes a broad
range of biological risk factors for disease and death.
Individual components of the measure, known as allostatic load,
include blood pressure, cholesterol levels, blood sugar metabolism
and hormonal levels. Those components often do not significantly
affect health outcomes, but assessing them together has been shown
to predict risk for disease and death, says lead author Teresa E.
Seeman, Ph.D., of the UCLA School of Medicine.
"Wear and tear across multiple physiological systems is consistent
with evidence that many people, particularly at later ages, suffer
from multiple, co-occurring chronic conditions," she says.
The study included a younger cohort of 106 men and women from the
Wisconsin Longitudinal Study who were most recently interviewed
at age 58 to 59, as well as an older cohort of nearly 1,200 participants
in the MacArthur Studies of Successful Aging who were between ages
70 and 79.
The researchers found that allostatic load was generally higher
in the older group of men and women, consistent with the idea that
allostatic load represents the normal wear and tear of aging.
Men and women who had a lot of supportive friends were much more
likely to score low for allostatic load than those with two or fewer
close friends. Women, and to a lesser extent men, also seemed to
benefit from good relationships with their parents and spouses.
"Relationships likely affect a range of biological systems as cognitive
and emotional qualities of social experiences are translated by
the brain to downstream patterns of physiological activity," she
says.
There was also a limited effect in the opposite direction. Men
and women who reported receiving more demands or criticism from
spouses or children tended to have higher allostatic load scores,
Seeman and colleagues say.
They note that the scores for allostatic load may have been underestimated
because the subsample chosen for the older cohort represented the
healthiest third in their age range, possibly diminishing the association
between this measure and social relationships.
"The current findings highlight the fact that social environment
effects on physiology are evident throughout the life course and
may thereby represent a pathway for social environment effects on
health and aging," she says.
The study was supported with grants from the John D. and Catherine
T. MacArthur Foundation and the National Institute on Aging and
the National Institute of Mental Health.
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Psychosomatic Medicine is the official bimonthly peer-reviewed
journal of the American Psychosomatic Society. For information about
the journal, contact Victoria White at (352) 376-1611, ext. 5300,
or visit http://www.hbns.org/newsrelease/www.psychosomaticmedicine.org.
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