Health & Medicine
University of Missouri Experts Determine Married Couples Happier than Unmarried or Widowed or Divorced Counterparts
Kathleen Lees
First Posted: Feb 13, 2013 05:05 PM EST
There might just be another reason to get hitched besides sharing a tax return. Research shows that married people reportedly have better mental and physical health than their unmarried peers and are less likely to develop chronic conditions than their widowed or divorced counterparts.
According to a University of Missouri expert, aging adults whose physical health is declining could especially benefit from improving their marriages.
Christine Proulx, an assistant professor in the MU Department of Human Development and Family Studies, examined the long-term relationship between self-rated health and marital quality. Her findings showed that in all stages of marriage, positive or negative relationships affect the individuals' health. Spouses should be aware that how they treat each other and how happiness reflects their marriages and both partners health. They should think more about their personal relationships when thinking holistically about their health, Proulx said.
"We often think about the aging process as something we can treat medically with a pill or more exercise, but working on your marriage also might benefit your health as you age," Proulx said. "Engaging with your spouse is not going to cure cancer, but building stronger relationships can improve both people's spirits and well-being and lower their stress."
Proulx also suggests that health professionals look at patients' personal relationships when designing health programs or treatment plans.
"Physicians should recognize that the strength of patients' marriages might affect their health," she said. "I suspect we'd have higher rates of adherence to treatment plans for chronic illnesses if medical professionals placed more of an emphasis on incorporating families and spouses in patients' care. If spouses understand their partners' disease and how to treat it at home, and the couple has a strong marriage, both people's health could improve."
She analyzed data from 707 continuously married adults who participated in the Marital Instability Over the Life Course panel study, a 20-year, nationwide research project started in 1980 with funding from the Social Security Administration's Office of Research and Statistics and the National Institute on Aging.
Most study participants were Caucasian, had more than high school educations, and earned more than $55,000 in annual family income in 2000. Because of these characteristics, Proulx believes the participants may have had protection against some marital or health challenges than others.
The study, "The Longitudinal Associations between Marital Happiness, Problems, and Self-Rated Health," will be published in the upcoming issue of the Journal of Family Psychology. Proulx co-authored the study with Linley Snyder-Rivas, an alumna of the Department of Human Development and Family Studies in theMU College of Human Environmental Sciences.
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First Posted: Feb 13, 2013 05:05 PM EST
There might just be another reason to get hitched besides sharing a tax return. Research shows that married people reportedly have better mental and physical health than their unmarried peers and are less likely to develop chronic conditions than their widowed or divorced counterparts.
According to a University of Missouri expert, aging adults whose physical health is declining could especially benefit from improving their marriages.
Christine Proulx, an assistant professor in the MU Department of Human Development and Family Studies, examined the long-term relationship between self-rated health and marital quality. Her findings showed that in all stages of marriage, positive or negative relationships affect the individuals' health. Spouses should be aware that how they treat each other and how happiness reflects their marriages and both partners health. They should think more about their personal relationships when thinking holistically about their health, Proulx said.
"We often think about the aging process as something we can treat medically with a pill or more exercise, but working on your marriage also might benefit your health as you age," Proulx said. "Engaging with your spouse is not going to cure cancer, but building stronger relationships can improve both people's spirits and well-being and lower their stress."
Proulx also suggests that health professionals look at patients' personal relationships when designing health programs or treatment plans.
"Physicians should recognize that the strength of patients' marriages might affect their health," she said. "I suspect we'd have higher rates of adherence to treatment plans for chronic illnesses if medical professionals placed more of an emphasis on incorporating families and spouses in patients' care. If spouses understand their partners' disease and how to treat it at home, and the couple has a strong marriage, both people's health could improve."
She analyzed data from 707 continuously married adults who participated in the Marital Instability Over the Life Course panel study, a 20-year, nationwide research project started in 1980 with funding from the Social Security Administration's Office of Research and Statistics and the National Institute on Aging.
Most study participants were Caucasian, had more than high school educations, and earned more than $55,000 in annual family income in 2000. Because of these characteristics, Proulx believes the participants may have had protection against some marital or health challenges than others.
The study, "The Longitudinal Associations between Marital Happiness, Problems, and Self-Rated Health," will be published in the upcoming issue of the Journal of Family Psychology. Proulx co-authored the study with Linley Snyder-Rivas, an alumna of the Department of Human Development and Family Studies in theMU College of Human Environmental Sciences.
See Now: NASA's Juno Spacecraft's Rendezvous With Jupiter's Mammoth Cyclone