October 27, 2008
Study Reveals Factors of Exceptional Health in Old Age
Positive Outlook, Low Stress & No Smoking Contribute to Healthy Old Age
(PORTLAND, Ore.) — Elderly people who have a positive outlook, lower stress levels,
moderate alcohol consumption, abstention from tobacco, moderate to higher income
and no chronic health conditions are more likely to thrive in their old age, according
to a study in the October
issue of the Journals of Gerontology, Medical Sciences.
The first study of its kind, researchers from Portland State University, the Kaiser
Permanente Center for Health Research, Oregon Health & Science University, and
Statistics Canada surveyed 2,432 older Canadians about their quality of life. The
few who maintained excellent health over an entire decade were considered “thrivers.”
Most previous studies have been based on one-time surveys and have focused on factors
that contribute to poor health.
“Important predictors of ‘thriving’ were the absence of chronic illness, income
over $30,000, having never smoked, and drinking alcohol in moderation,” said Mark
Kaplan, Dr PH, lead author and professor of community health at Portland State University.
“We also found that people who had a positive outlook and lower stress levels were
more likely to thrive in old age.”
“Many of these factors can be modified when you are young or middle-aged,” said
David Feeny, Ph.D., co-author and senior investigator at the Kaiser Permanente Center
for Health Research. “While these findings may seem like common sense, now we have
evidence about which factors contribute to exceptional health during retirement
years.”
Study participants filled out an extensive health survey every other year, starting
in 1994 and continuing through 2004. One measure, called the Health Utilities Index,
asked people to rate their abilities in eight categories, including vision, hearing,
speech, ambulation, dexterity, emotion, cognition, and pain. “Thrivers” were those who rated themselves as having no or only mild disability in all eight categories
on at least five of the six surveys.
If respondents reported moderate or severe disability on any of the six surveys,
they were classified as “non-thrivers.” Just over half (or 50.8 percent) of the
respondents started out as “thrivers”, but by the end of the 10 years, only 8 percent
of the respondents were considered thrivers. At the end of the study period, 47
percent of the respondents were classified as non-thrivers. Thirty-six percent had
died and 9 percent were institutionalized.
“Even though the study was conducted in Canada, the findings are certainly applicable
to the United States and other industrialized nations,” says Bentson McFarland,
MD, Ph.D., co-author and professor of psychiatry, public health and preventive medicine
at Oregon Health & Science University. “Our population here in the United States
is similar demographically to Canada’s, and both health care systems rely on the
same underlying technologies.”
The study was funded by a grant from the National Institute on Aging. Authors include
Mark S. Kaplan, Ph.D., and Nathalie Huguet, PhD, from Portland State University; Heather Orpana, Ph.D., from Statistics Canada and the University of Ottawa; David
Feeny, Ph.D., from the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research and Health Utilities
Incorporated; Bentson H. McFarland, MD, Ph.D., from Oregon Health & Science
University, and Nancy Ross, Ph.D., at McGill University in Canada.
Author David Feeny has a proprietary interest in Health Utilities Incorporated (HUInc.),
Dundas, Ontario, Canada. The HUI survey instrument used in this study was developed
in cooperation with the Canadian government. Neither Feeny nor HUInc. received any
monetary reimbursement for use of the survey.
Kaiser Permanente’s Center for Health Research, founded in 1964, is a non-profit
research institution whose mission is advancing knowledge to improve health. It
has research sites in Portland OR; Honolulu, HI; and Atlanta, GA.
Portland State University (PSU) serves as a center of opportunity
for over 27,000 undergraduate and graduate students. Located in Portland, Ore.,
one of the nation's most livable cities, the University's innovative approach to
education combines academic rigor in the classroom with field-based experiences
through internships and classroom projects with community partners. The University's
49-acre downtown campus exhibits Portland State's commitment to sustainability with
green buildings, and many of the 125 bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees
incorporate sustainability into the curriculum. PSU's motto, "Let Knowledge Serve
the City," inspires the teaching and research of an accomplished faculty whose work
and students span the globe.
For more infomation contact:
Mary Sawyers,
(503) 335-6602