A large-scale observational
study adds to the increasing body of research on the health benefits
of optimism
A positive outlook on life might lower your
risk of having a stroke, according to new research reported in Stroke:
Journal of the American Heart Association.
In an observational study, a nationally representative group of
6,044 adults over age 50 rated their optimism levels on a 16-point
scale. Each point increase in optimism corresponded to a 9 percent
decrease in acute stroke risk over a two-year follow-up period.
"Our work suggests that people who expect the best things
in life actively take steps to promote health," said Eric Kim,
study lead author and a clinical psychology doctoral student at
the University of Michigan.
Optimism is the expectation that more good things, rather than
bad, will happen. Previous research has shown that an optimistic
attitude is associated with better heart health outcomes and enhanced
immune system functioning, among other positive effects.
The study is the first to discover a correlation between optimism
and stroke. Previous research has shown that low pessimism and temporary
positive emotions are linked to lower stroke risk.
Researchers analyzed self-reported stroke and psychological data
from the ongoing Health and Retirement Study, collected between
2006 and 2008. Participants were stroke-free at the beginning of
the study.
Researchers measured optimism levels with the modified Life Orientation
Test-Revised, a widely used assessment tool in which participants
rank their responses on a numeric scale.
The team used logistic regression analysis to establish the association
between optimism and stroke and adjusted for factors that might
affect stroke risk, including chronic illness, self-reported health
and sociodemographic, behavioral, biological and psychological conditions.
"Optimism seems to have a swift impact on stroke," said
Kim, noting that researchers followed participants for only two
years.
The protective effect of optimism may primarily be due to behavioral
choices that people make, such as taking vitamins, eating a healthy
diet and exercising, researchers said. However, some evidence suggests
positive thinking might have a strictly biological impact as well.
Co-authors of the study are Nansook Park, Ph.D., and Christopher
Peterson, Ph.D., The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Pioneer Portfolio
funded a part of the study through the Positive Psychology Center
of the University of Pennsylvania.
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