If Your Life has Purpose, You May Live Longer

Higher scores on the survey showed greater purpose in life

Older people who feel their life has purpose may be less likely to die from heart, circulatory and digestive diseases and more likely to live longer, new data revealed.

In a study that surveyed nearly 7,000 people over age 50 for more than a decade, researchers determined that people were more likely to die at a younger age if they felt their lives had little purpose, according to the report published in JAMA Network Open.

“We found a strong association between life purpose and mortality in the U S,” stated the study’s lead author, Leigh Pearce of the University of Michigan School of Public Health. “This has also been found in a number of studies conducted in a number of populations and seems to be quite a robust association.”

What constitutes “life purpose?” “I think it’s about what people think is most valuable to them,” Pearce said. “Community, achievement, reputation, relationships, spirituality, kindness — these can all feed into any one person’s life purpose. So there is not a specific definition for any one person.”

Pearce and her colleagues explored the topic using data from The Health and Retirement Study, a national cohort study of U S adults older than 50. The earliest participants were enrolled in the study in 1992 and were born between 1931 and 1941.

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