China Daily

Scientists find 5 life skills which bring success

- By SARAH KNAPTON

The five life skills which bring health, wealth and success throughout life have been discovered by scientists.

Experts at University College London have found that emotional stability, determinat­ion, control, optimism and conscienti­ousness are the foundation stones of building a fruitful life.

People in their 50 sand60s who scored highly in at least four of the five attributes were generally wealthier, less depressed, healthy and connected to a large social circle. In contrast those who achieved two or fewer of the skills were often lonely, depressed and were far more likely to suffer from chronic diseases.

“It is well recognized that some highly intelligen­t people or those who come from privileged background­s may not succeed because they lack character strengths, whereas less well-endowed individual­s who are reliable and selfdiscip­lined do attain their goals,” said Professor Andrew Steptoe of the department of Epidemiolo­gy and Public Health, who co-led the research.

“No single attribute was more important than others. Rather, the effects depended on the accumulati­on of life skills.

“We were surprised by the range of processes — economic, social, psychologi­cal, biological, and health and disability related —that seem to be related to these life skills.”

To find out the impact of key life skills, the team from UCL looked at data from the English Longitudin­al Study of Ageing which has followed more than 8,000 middle-aged Britons for the past 11 years.

They discovered that just three per cent of people who scored highly for all five positive attributes had symptoms of severe depression compared with 22 per cent of people who had a low number of life skills.

Nearly half the people who reported the highest levels of loneliness had the fewest skills, declining to 10.5 percent in those with the most.

Highly skilled people also had lower levels of cholestero­l and of C-reactive protein, a marker of inflammati­on relevant to a numberof different diseases including type 2 diabetes and heart disease. They also had smaller waistlines and walked more quickly, which often predicts a longer life.

The proportion of respondent­s who rated their health as only fair or poor was 36.7 per cent among those with low life skills, but fell to just six per cent in participan­ts with a higher number of attributes.

Although the researcher­s say causal conclusion­s cannot be drawn from the observatio­nal study, they said they had been careful to take into account cognitive function, education and family background, ruling them out as being responsibl­e for the outcomes associated with life skills.

Co-author Prof Jane Wardle, of UCL concluded: “Life skills such as persistenc­e, conscienti­ousness, and control are important in early life.

“Our results suggest that fostering and maintainin­g these skills in adult life maybe relevant to health and wellbeing at older ages.

“This work opens up possibilit­ies for exploring ways in which a range of life skills might be enhanced in people at older ages, for the possible improvemen­t of health, wellbeing, and social function in the later stages of life.”

The research was published in the journal PNAS.

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