Spouses tend
Lung Cancer ~ Lung Cancer ~ Breast Cancer ~ Heart attack ~ All Health Topics
Home / Health News / 2007 / October 2007 / October 4, 2007
Spouses tend to follow each others health habits

Health News

Structure of key breast cancer target enzyme unraveled
A researcher at Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute has moved a step closer to a cure, and possibly the prevention, of the most common type of breast cancer. ANI

Smoking claimed 673,000 Chinese lives in 2005
A multinational research team, led by scientists at Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, has lent more force to the suggestion that smoking is a significant risk factor for mortality and disease. ANI

Genetic mutations can predict childhood leukaemia relapse
A collaborative study by American researchers has revealed that changes in a gene called IKAROS can help predict a high likelihood of relapse in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). ANI

Spouses tend to follow each others health habits

People can not only benefit themselves by adopting a healthy lifestyle but their spouses also, as a new study has shown that men and women tend to follow the same health related habits as their life partners.

Washington, October 4 : People can not only benefit themselves by adopting a healthy lifestyle but their spouses also, as a new study has shown that men and women tend to follow the same health related habits as their life partners.

"We found that when one spouse improves his or her health behaviour, the other spouse was likely to do so as well," said study co-author Jody Sindelar, health economist and public health professor in the Yale School of Public Health.

"This was consistent across all the behaviours analysed and was similar among both males and females," she said.

The researchers analysed longitudinal data on 6,072 individuals and their spouses from the Health and Retirement Study, and found that the changes in spouses' health habits were most apparent in such behaviour as smoking and drinking, which is often spurred by outside cues.

The study subjects also tended to reflect the health habits of their spouses in patient-directed preventive behaviour, such as getting a flu shot.

According to the researchers, smokers were about five times more likely to quit smoking if their spouses quit, when controlling for other relevant factors. Similarly, spouses were five times more likely to quit drinking alcohol if their partner did not drink, they say.

The researchers, however, have revealed that the changes were less apparent in clinician-directed preventive behaviour, such as obtaining cholesterol screening.

Sindelar and co-author Dr. Tracy Falba, visiting assistant professor at Duke University's Center for Health Policy, Law and Management, strongly feel that that attempts to change the behaviour of a person may be enhanced by the behaviour of family members, especially spouses.

They say that intervention programs should include tips about how to get the other spouse involved in exercise or help reduce tobacco cues.

ANI

January 8, 2009

January 7, 2009

January 6, 2009

January 5, 2009

January 4, 2009

January 3, 2009