New Columbia Research Links Education to Slower Aging and a Longer Lifespan
Two years of education resulted in a 2-3 percent reduction in the rate of aging.
Individuals involved in the Framingham Heart Study who attained higher educational levels experienced slower aging and had longer lifespans compared to those who did not advance educationally, reveals research from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and The Robert N. Butler Columbia Aging Center. The study found a significant link between upward educational mobility and reduced aging speed as well as decreased mortality risk. The results were recently published in JAMA Network Open.
The Framingham Heart Study is an ongoing observational study first initiated in 1948 that currently spans three generations. The Columbia analysis is the first to connect educational mobility with the pace of biological aging and mortality.
-
1:18:33
Caleb Hammer
15 hours agoHer Dad Threatened My Life
10.5K2 -
1:59:37
LFA TV
3 hours agoBIG BOY PROBLEMS! | LIVE FROM AMERICA 7.12.24 11am EST
33.5K32 -
1:17:24
Graham Allen
5 hours ago🚨IT’S OVER: Dems are Plotting to KICK JOE OUT after Failed NATO Press conference!!
44.8K117 -
2:39:21
Matt Kohrs
15 hours agoIt's Payday Friday!!! || The MK Show
41K5 -
2:01:28
AP4Liberty
5 hours agoBiden's Vice President? Trump!
32.3K6 -
1:34:28
The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
6 hours agoThe Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #955
48K16 -
1:23:58
Game On!
14 hours agoMarvin Harrison Jr will be the biggest NFL Bust | NFC West 2024 Preview
39K1 -
2:45:03
Melonie Mac
16 hours agoGo Boom Live Ep 12!
43.9K24 -
23:22
Destene and Brandon
21 hours agoListening to PomPom's HEARTBEAT for the first time | Destene and Brandon | Weekly Vlog
37.7K4 -
53:58
Texas Strong
18 hours agoTalking CWD with TDA president, Jody Phillips
45.6K3