Educated ‘less likely to develop heart disease’
PEOPLE WHO spend more time in education are less likely to develop heart disease including heart attacks and heart failure, experts have found.
A new study showed that people who stayed in education for longer were 30 per cent less likely to develop coronary heart disease.
Researchers examined the 162 genetic variants which are linked to education. Their study, published in
found that people with more of these educational DNA markers, and therefore more years in education, were less likely to develop coronary heart disease.
Increasing the number of years that people spend in education may lower their risk of developing coronary heart disease by a “substantial” amount, the authors said.
The international team of researchers from University College London, the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, and the University of Oxford, analysed genetic variants among 543,733 predominantly European men and women.
They found that 3.6 years of additional education, which is similar to an undergraduate university degree, was associated with a one third lower risk of coronary heart disease.
And having a genetic predisposition towards longer time spent in education was also linked to a lower body mass index.
These people were also less likely to smoke and have a more favourable blood fat profile.
The findings suggest that increasing time spent in education may result in “substantial health benefits”, the authors wrote.