Lack of joy in life ups early death risk: study

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Lack of joy in life ups early death risk: study

Reuters Health is reporting research from Japan showing that people who don’t think life is worth living are more likely to die within the next few years. In other words, joyful people live longer.
My Take?
In my book, God’s Design for the Highly Healthy Person  I discuss what I call “the 10 essentials of highly healthy people.” One of those essentials is what I call, “the essential of a positive self image.”
This study is another documentation that I was on the right track. It showed that the increased death risk was mainly due to cardiovascular disease and external causes – most commonly, suicide.
The study is unique in that it is the largest to date to investigate how what the Japanese call, “ikigai,” or “joy and a sense of well-being from being alive,” affects mortality risk, and only the second to examine death from specific causes.
The investigators looked at 43,391 men and women 40 to 79 years old living in the Ohsaki region who were followed for seven years, during which time 3,048 died. 
All were asked, “Do you have ikigai in your life?” Fifty-nine percent said yes, 36.4 percent said they weren’t sure, and 4.6 percent said no.
Those who didn’t have a sense of ikigai were less likely to be married or employed, and were also less educated, in worse health, more mentally stressed, and in more bodily pain. They were also more likely to have limited physical function.
But even after the researchers used statistical techniques to adjust for these factors, people with no sense of ikigai were still at increased risk of dying over the follow-up period compared to people who did have ikigai. 
The relationship also was independent of history of illness and alcohol use.
Overall, people with no sense of ikigai were 50 percent more likely to die from any cause during follow-up compared to those who did have a sense that life was worth living. 
They had a 60 percent greater risk of death from cardiovascular disease, most commonly stroke, and were 90 percent more likely to die of “external” causes. Of the 186 deaths due to external causes among study participants, 90 were suicides.
The Bible talks about ikigai when it tells us that the fruit of the Spirit is “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, and self-control.” 
And, who doesn’t want that in their life?
 

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