The
next time someone calls you a doom n' gloom merchant.
I read the other day that Abraham Lincoln suffered from melancholy ("now called clinical depression") - perhaps he would have been put on prozac?!
I read the other day that Abraham Lincoln suffered from melancholy ("now called clinical depression") - perhaps he would have been put on prozac?!
Pessimists
live longer and healthier lives
Pessimism
about the future may lead to longer and healthier life, researchers
have suggested
28
February, 2013
According
to a new study, older people who have low expectations for a
satisfying future may be more likely to live longer, healthier lives
than those who see brighter days ahead.
"Our
findings revealed that being overly optimistic in predicting a better
future was associated with a greater risk of disability and death
within the following decade," said lead author Frieder R. Lang,
PhD, of the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany.
"Pessimism
about the future may encourage people to live more carefully, taking
health and safety precautions," Lang stated.
Lang
and colleagues examined data collected from 1993 to 2003 for the
national German Socio-Economic Panel, an annual survey of private
households consisting of approximately 40,000 people 18 to 96 years
old. The researchers divided the data according to age groups: 18 to
39 years old, 40 to 64 years old and 65 years old and above.
Through
mostly in-person interviews, respondents were asked to rate how
satisfied they were with their lives and how satisfied they thought
they would be in five years.
Five
years after the first interview, 43 percent of the oldest group had
underestimated their future life satisfaction, 25 percent had
predicted accurately and 32 percent had overestimated, according to
the study.
Based
on the average level of change in life satisfaction over time for
this group, each increase in overestimating future life satisfaction
was related to a 9.5 percent increase in reporting disabilities and a
10 percent increased risk of death, the analysis revealed.
Because
a darker outlook on the future is often more realistic, older adults'
predictions of their future satisfaction may be more accurate,
according to the study. In contrast, the youngest group had the
sunniest outlook while the middle-aged adults made the most accurate
predictions, but became more pessimistic over time.
"Unexpectedly,
we also found that stable and good health and income were associated
with expecting a greater decline compared with those in poor health
or with low incomes. Moreover, we found that higher income was
related to a greater risk of disability," Lang said.
The
researchers measured the respondents' current and future life
satisfaction on a scale of 0 to 10 and determined accuracy in
predicting life satisfaction by measuring the difference between
anticipated life satisfaction reported in 1993 and actual life
satisfaction reported in 1998.
They
analyzed the data to determine age differences in estimated life
satisfaction; accuracy in predicting life satisfaction; age, gender
and income differences in the accuracy of predicting life
satisfaction; and rates of disability and death reported between 1999
and 2010. Other factors, such as illness, medical treatment or
personal losses, may have driven health outcomes, the study said.
The
findings do not contradict theories that unrealistic optimism about
the future can sometimes help people feel better when they are facing
inevitable negative outcomes, such as terminal disease, according to
the authors.
"We
argue, though, that the outcomes of optimistic, accurate or
pessimistic forecasts may depend on age and available resources,"
Lang said.
"These
findings shed new light on how our perspectives can either help or
hinder us in taking actions that can help improve our chances of a
long healthy life," he added.
The
study was published online in the journal Psychology and Aging.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.