People who have upbeat outlooks on life have
significantly better cardiovascular health, suggests a new study that examined
associations between optimism and heart health in more than 5,100 adults.
"Individuals with the highest levels of
optimism have twice the odds of being in ideal cardiovascular health compared
to their more pessimistic counterparts," said lead author Rosalba
Hernandez, a professor of social work at the University of Illinois. "This
association remains significant, even after adjusting for socio-demographic
characteristics and poor mental health."
Participants' cardiovascular health was assessed
using seven metrics: blood pressure, body mass index, fasting plasma glucose
and serum cholesterol levels, dietary intake, physical activity and tobacco use
- the same metrics used by the American Heart Association to define heart
health and being targeted by the AHA in its Life's Simple 7 public awareness
campaign.
In accordance with AHA's heart-health criteria,
the researchers allocated 0, 1 or 2 points - representing poor, intermediate
and ideal scores, respectively - to participants on each of the seven health
metrics, which were then summed to arrive at a total cardiovascular health
score. Participants' total health scores ranged from 0 to 14, with a higher
total score indicative of better health.
The participants, who ranged in age from 45-84,
also completed surveys that assessed their mental health, levels of optimism,
and physical health, based upon self-reported extant medical diagnoses of arthritis,
liver and kidney disease.
Individuals' total health scores increased in
tandem with their levels of optimism. People who were the most optimistic were
50 and 76 percent more likely to have total health scores in the intermediate
or ideal ranges, respectively.
The association between optimism and
cardiovascular health was even stronger when socio-demographic characteristics
such as age, race and ethnicity, income and education status were factored in.
People who were the most optimistic were twice as likely to have ideal
cardiovascular health, and 55 percent more likely to have a total health score
in the intermediate range, the researchers found.
Optimists had significantly better blood sugar
and total cholesterol levels than their counterparts. They also were more
physically active, had healthier body mass indexes and were less likely to
smoke, according to a paper on the research that appears in the
January/February 2015 issue of Health Behavior and Policy Review.
The findings may be of clinical significance,
given that a 2013 study indicated that a one-point increase in an individual's
total-health score on the LS7 was associated with an 8 percent reduction in
their risk of stroke, Hernandez said.
"At the population level, even this
moderate difference in cardiovascular health translates into a significant
reduction in death rates," Hernandez said. "This evidence, which is
hypothesized to occur through a biobehavioral mechanism, suggests that
prevention strategies that target modification of psychological well-being -
e.g., optimism - may be a potential avenue for AHA to reach its goal of
improving Americans' cardiovascular health by 20 percent before 2020."
Believed to be the first study to examine the
association of optimism and cardiovascular health in a large, ethnically and
racially diverse population, the sample for the current study was 38 percent
white, 28 percent African-American, 22 percent Hispanic/Latino and 12 percent
Chinese.
Data for the study were derived from the
Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, an ongoing examination of subclinical
cardiovascular disease that includes 6,000 people from six U.S. regions,
including Baltimore, Chicago, Forsyth County in North Carolina, and Los Angeles
County.
Begun in July 2000, MESA followed participants
for 11 years, collecting data every 18 months to two years. Hernandez, who is
an affiliated investigator on MESA, is leading a team in conducting prospective
analyses on the associations found between optimism and heart health.
"We now have available data to examine
optimism at baseline and cardiovascular health a decade later," said
Hernandez, who expects to have an abstract completed in 2015.
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