Saskatoon StarPhoenix

MEN WHO VIEW THEIR MARRIAGE AS UNSUCCESSF­UL ARE MORE LIKELY TO DIE AN EARLY DEATH FROM STROKE, ACCORDING TO A STUDY THAT SAYS ROUGH RELATIONSH­IPS ARE AS HARMFUL TO HEALTH AS SMOKING.

- DAVE YASVINSKI

Men who view their marriage as unsuccessf­ul are more likely to die an early death from stroke, according to a new study that says rough relationsh­ips are as harmful to health as smoking or living a sedentary life.

The study, conducted at Tel Aviv University in Israel and published in the Journal of Clinical Medicine, also found that unhappy husbands face an increased risk of death from any cause.

“Our study shows that the quality of marriage and family life has health implicatio­ns for life expectancy,” said Shahar Lev-ari, one of study's authors and head of the Department of Health promotion at Tel Aviv University's School of Public Health. “Men who reported they perceived their marriage as failure died younger than those who experience­d their marriages as very successful. In other words, the level of satisfacti­on with marriage has emerged as a predictive factor for life expectancy at a rate comparable with smoking (smokers versus non-smokers) and physical activity (activity versus inactivity).”

The study relied on 30 years of health data that tracked the lives and deaths of 10,000 Israeli state employees beginning in the 1960s, paying close attention to deaths from cerebrovas­cular accidents (strokes) and all-cause mortality.

Participan­ts, who were in their 40s when the longitudin­al study began, were asked early on to rate their overall level of satisfacti­on with their marriage on a scale of 1 (very successful) to 4 (very unsuccessf­ul).

Researcher­s were surprised to discover that this measure was as predictive a factor of life expectancy as smoking or a lack of physical activity. The number of men who died from a stroke was 69 per cent higher among men who felt their marriage was very unsuccessf­ul compared to those who felt the exact opposite.

In terms of deaths from any cause, happily married men enjoyed a 19 per cent advantage, suffering 248.5 deaths compared to 295.3 among gloomy grooms. Interestin­gly, the gap between the two groups was larger at younger ages closer to the beginning of the study.

The research offers compelling evidence that committed relationsh­ips yield a wealth of benefits that contribute to longer, healthier lives. “Studies show that people who live together, but who do not have the kind of certainty of knowing that they are going to stay together, don't get the health benefits of staying in their relationsh­ip,” said Marta Zaraska, a science journalist and the author of Growing Young: How Friendship, Optimism and Kindness Can Help You Live to 100.

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