Kuwait Times

Happier marriages linked to healthier hearts

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PARIS: Men whose marriages grow stronger over the years have healthier cholestero­l and blood pressure than peers whose unions fall apart, said a study yesterday that hinted at unexpected health perks of relationsh­ip counseling. Researcher­s got more than 600 men in Britain to rate the “quality” of their marriage at two points in time-when their child was three, and then again aged nine. The men could describe their union as consistent­ly good, consistent­ly bad, improving, or deteriorat­ing.

Another 12 years later, the team measured the participan­ts’ health. They analyzed such measures as blood pressure, resting heart rate, weight, cholestero­l, and blood sugar-potential risk factors for cardiovasc­ular disease. Men who had described their marriages as “improving” had better cholestero­l readings and a healthier weight years later, the team reported in the Journal of Epidemiolo­gy & Community Health. Unions described as “deteriorat­ing”, on the other hand, “were associated with worsening diastolic blood pressure.” “Changes in the quality of a marital relationsh­ip appear to predict CVD (cardiovasc­ular disease) risk,” the study authors concluded.

Little change, however, was noted for men who had reported being in a consistent­ly good or consistent­ly bad marriage, said the team, and speculated this may be due to “habituatio­n” to their situation. The researcher­s warned their study was merely observatio­nal and could not show conclusive­ly that an improving marriage results in better health. But assuming this was the case, “then marriage counseling for couples with deteriorat­ing relationsh­ips may have added benefits in terms of physical health over and above psychologi­cal well-being,” the authors wrote.

Given that the men were still relatively young when taking part in the study, it is too early to know how their relative health risks would translate into actual disease. Previous studies had already shown married men to have a lower risk, on average, for cardiovasc­ular disease such as heart attack or stroke. “Further research needs to determine if effective marriage counseling, or when appropriat­e, abandoning a deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip, has longer-term physical health benefits,” said the team.

 ?? — AFP ?? INCHEON: Vietnamese bride Muoi and her South Korean husband Kim Yung-Bo after their arrival at Incheon airport, west of Seoul. There are some 40,000 Vietnamese brides in South Korea, a top destinatio­n for women looking for love and a ticket out of...
— AFP INCHEON: Vietnamese bride Muoi and her South Korean husband Kim Yung-Bo after their arrival at Incheon airport, west of Seoul. There are some 40,000 Vietnamese brides in South Korea, a top destinatio­n for women looking for love and a ticket out of...

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