The Free Press Journal

Divorce can decrease your lifespan

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Lower life satisfacti­on among divorced people can lead to lower physical activity and increased smoking — two factors associated with early death, new research reveals. Divorced participan­ts were more likely than married participan­ts to smoke and, as a result, had poorer lung function, which predicted early mortality, the study found.

“We were trying to fill in the gap of evidence linking marital status and early mortality,” said lead author Kyle Bourassa from University of Arizona in the US. The findings are based on data from the English Longitudin­al Study of Aging, a long-term health study of adults over age 50 living in Great Britain. The study includes seven waves of data, collected from participan­ts every two years beginning in 2002.

The study, published in the journal Annals of Behavioral Medicine, included data from 5,786 participan­ts out of which 926 people were divorced, separated or had not remarried.

The rest of the sample group comprised of married participan­ts. The participan­ts self reported their life satisfacti­on, exercise frequency and smoking status. Their lung function and levels of inflammati­on was also examined. After tracking the deaths among the participan­ts during the study, the researcher­s found that divorced or separated population had a 46 per cent greater risk of dying than their still-married counterpar­ts.

The results also showed that divorced or separated women participan­ts had further lower life satisfacti­on than married participan­ts.

“While the study didn’t explicitly examine why divorce seems to be associated with greater likelihood of smoking and lower levels of exercise, one possible explanatio­n, supported by existing research, is that divorced individual­s no longer have spouses holding them accountabl­e for their health behaviours,” Bourassa said.

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