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23 Aug

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Health News Results - 29

Everyone needs to feel appreciated -- but especially someone who’s caring for a spouse with dementia.

A study published recently in the journal Comprehensive Psychoneuroendocrinology shows that the mental health of

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • December 23, 2024
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  • Baby Boom seniors are divorcing at rates triple that of a few decades ago, a new study has found.

    “Gray divorce” among folks 65 and older increased to 15% in 2022 from 5% in 1990, according to research from the National Center for Family...

    A wedding band may be good medicine for men as they age, but not so much for women, new research shows.

    A three-year study of over 7,600 Canadians aged 60 and older found that men who got hitched were twice as likely to "age optimally," compared to guys who remained single.

    Marriage offered no such aging benefit to women, however. In fact, single women were twice as likely to age ...

    A person’s lifespan appears to be linked to four specific social factors – marriage, gender, education and race.

    The interplay between those four factors helps explain differences in lifespan between Americans, researchers report.

    “There is a complex interaction between social and individual determinants of health, with no one determinant explaining the full obse...

    Many couples may be painfully familiar with the scenario: One partner snores loudly all night long, so the other partner seeks better sleep in another bed.

    Now, a new survey from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) shows just how common the practice of "sleep divorce" is: 29% of Americans have opted to sleep in another bed in the same bedroom or in another space in the home to...

    If you and your partner fall silent when vexing money issues arise, new research suggests you are not alone.

    A team from Cornell University found that the more stressed people were about their finances, the less likely they were to discuss those concerns with their romantic partners.

    The findings were published recently in the

  • Robin Foster HealthDay Reporter
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  • July 4, 2024
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  • People largely date and marry people in their own "league,"as far as beauty is concerned, a new review finds.

    Men and women are fairly accurate at rating their own physical attractiveness, and they tend to choose mates who have similar views of their own beauty, researchers report.

    For example, fellows who rated themselves as attractive tended to date ladies with similar self-rating...

    Strapping a mask to your face can make for a happier marriage, a new study suggests.

    Relationships with partners flourish if a person with sleep apnea starts using a continuous positive air pressure (CPAP) machine on a regular basis, researchers found.

    <...

    A strong relationship can help a breast cancer survivor thrive in the aftermath of their terrible ordeal, a new study finds.

    Diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer places tremendous stress on the women and their partners, researchers said.

    Those women in a solid relationship with...

    While marriage can be hard work, a new survey suggests it can also be a powerful elixir for happiness.

    Adults who are married report being more satisfied with their lives than those in any other type of relationship, the Gallup poll showed.

    "Any way you analyze those data, we see a fairly l...

    Being in a marriage or long-term relationship typically includes promises of monogamy, but new research shows a surprising number of folks, mostly men, are open to the idea of having another person in the mix.

    Fully one-third of men in the United Kingdom are open to the idea of having more than one wife or long-term girlfriend, while only 11% of women would want someone else in their rela...

    Many women and men begin new relationships never dreaming they could later be enmeshed in a cycle of intimate partner violence.

    Now, a new study finds there are early behavioral warning signs from a partner that suggest the risk for violence is there. And the more signs a person sees in the partner, the higher the potential risk.

    "These red flags could eventually be used in interven...

    In sickness and in health -- and in blood pressure, too?

    A new international study finds that if your blood pressure rises with time, your spouse's might, also.

    "Many people know that high blood pressure is common in middle-aged and older adults, yet we were surprised to find that among many older couples, both husband and wife had high blood pressure in the U.S., England, China and...

    Most fathers experience a decline in relationship satisfaction that can last for years after the baby is born, new research shows.

    "A good couple relationship during the transition to parenthood is important for parents' mental health, involvement in parenting and bonding, as well as child development,"said lead author

  • Sarah D. Collins HealthDay Reporter
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  • August 31, 2023
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  • More than one-third of coupled Americans who want better sleep are opting for a "sleep divorce."

    They're not actually divorcing, but sleeping in another room so that they each sleep better.

    "We know that poor sleep can worsen your mood, and those who are sleep deprived are more likely to argue with their partners. There may be some resentment toward the person causing the sleep dis...

    The key to a happier and longer marriage may be pooling your money.

    Researchers found that couples with joint bank accounts had better relationships, fought less about money and felt better about how their household finances were handled.

    "When we surveyed people of varying relationship lengths, those who had merged accounts reported higher levels of communality within their marri...

    Financial stress and work lost to cancer treatment affects patients and their partners alike.

    Partners also experienced pain, fatigue and sleep issues owing to these fiscal worries, a new study found.

    "We know that financial toxicity or hardship is a significa...

    While losing a spouse can shorten anyone's life, new Danish research suggests widowers may be far more vulnerable than widows.

    After six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed...

    When heart failure strikes, being a lifelong bachelor may mean you might die sooner than women or previously married men diagnosed with the same condition, a new study suggests.

    Lifetime marital history appears to be an important predictor of survival in men with heart failure, but not women. Specifically, lifelong bachelors had significantly worse long-term survival than men who had bee...

    Getting hitched could help middle-aged and older folks get a better handle on their blood sugar, a new study reports.

    People living with a spouse appeared to be better able to maintain lower blood sugar levels than single folks, according to the findings.

    This benefit held regardless of the state of their relationship, the researchers added. Whether bickering or snuggling, married f...

    Tying the knot is now tied to healthier aging brains: People who stay married for the long haul may gain some protection from dementia, a new study suggests.

    Researchers found that compared with both divorced people and lifelong singles, older adults in a long-term marriage were less likely to develop dementia. Roughly 11% were diagnosed with dementia after age 70, versus 12% to 14% of t...

    A bad marriage can break your heart -- literally.

    Heart attack survivors in a stressful relationship are more likely to have a rocky recovery, a new study reports.

    "We found there's an independent association between severe marital stress and worse outcomes within their first year of recovery," said lead research...

    People who have weight loss surgery often see improvements in type 2 diabetes and other diseases, but these surgeries and the lifestyle changes they require can also have spillover effects on other aspects of life, including relationships.

    Compared to the general U.S. population, folks who have weight loss s...

    Heartache and heartbreak are apt terms for the intense grief caused by losing a spouse.

    A new study says such a loss can lead to major health problems and even death, and the paper may help explain why that happens.

    When faced with stressful situations, grieving spouses have significant increases in

    You might think that having the whole bed to yourself would leave you feeling more refreshed in the morning than sleeping with someone who might toss, turn or snore.

    Yet, a new study suggests that adults who share their beds with a partner have less severe insomnia, less fatigue and more sleep ...

    The structure of teens' families influences their risk of delinquent behaviors such as shoplifting, graffiti or robbery, new research suggests.

    For the study, the researchers analyzed survey data gathered between 2016 and 2019 from more than 3,800 14- and 15-year-olds in Sweden. They used a statistical measure called incident rate ratio, or IRR, to compare groups.

    "This study shows...

    Vaccine politics can apparently lead to some mismatched bedfellows, a new study suggests.

    It found that about 1 in 6 U.S. couples have one partner who is vaccinated against COVID-19 and one who is not, and there are several reasons why.

    "The numbers might be small in this stu...

    First comes love. Then comes marriage. Then comes baby in the baby carriage.

    While that childhood rhyme used to be true, college-educated women in the United States are now more likely than ever to have a first baby outside marriage. They're also more likely than other women to have a wedding ring by the time they have their second baby.

    "It suggests a change in the way that college...

    Feelings of despair and hopelessness can raise the odds of death in people battling heart disease, and new research suggests that where you live, as well as your marital status, can also play a role.

    The study found that heart disease patients who lived in rural areas and were unmarried were more likely to feel hopeless.

    "Because we know hopelessness is predictive of death in p...

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