UK Health Radio
Medical News Update on the Hour
Mid Life Blues Hit
the Wealthy Hardest
A very interesting
report from the BBC that says that happiness nose-dives as you hit middle age -
but only if you live in the affluent West, according to experts.
Using world survey data,
the Lancet study authors found life satisfaction followed a predictable
trajectory depending on where people lived.
In countries such as the
UK and the US, life satisfaction followed a U-shape, dipping to a low in
midlife.
In Africa it was low
throughout, and in Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union and Latin America it
declined with age.
The reasons behind the
trends were multiple and complex, but there were some plausible explanations as
well as important lessons to be learned, said Prof Andrew Steptoe, and
colleagues of University College London,.
Their report is part of
a series on health and ageing, published in The Lancet, warning of a growing
burden of chronic disease and diminished wellbeing affecting the quality of
life of older people.
As well as physical
health and pain, they considered three measures of wellbeing:
·
Evaluative - how
satisfied people were with their lives
·
Hedonic - feelings or
moods such as happiness, sadness and anger
·
Eudemonic - judgements
about the meaning and purpose of life
In Western world
nations, life satisfaction bottomed out between the ages of 45 and 54 before
rising again.
Co-researcher Angus
Deaton, of Princeton University in the US, said economics could explain this.
"This is the period
at which wage rates typically peak and is the best time to work and earn the
most, even at the expense of present wellbeing, so as to have increased wealth
and wellbeing later in life," he said.
It might explain why
elderly people were happier despite becoming more frail - although poorer
health led to lower ratings of life satisfaction among the elderly, higher life
satisfaction seemed to stave off physical health declines. In transition countries, such as the former Soviet
Union, life satisfaction declined steadily with age and was generally lower
overall than in the West.
This could be linked to
economics, said the researchers. Older people in these countries had lost a
system that, however imperfect, had given meaning to their lives, and, in some
cases, their pensions and their health care.
In sub-Saharan Africa,
satisfaction was very low throughout life, while stress and worry was high.
"The findings
undoubtedly show the recent experiences of the region and the distress that
these events have brought to older people," said Prof Deaton.
Prof Steptoe said while
money did not equate to happiness, economic progress did promote wellbeing to
an extent.
"It would appear
that wellbeing goes along with economic prosperity in the world," he said.
Amanda Thomas
UK Health Radio
Medical News Update on the Hour
Kindly sponsored by
1-stop-health-shop.com
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