Add protection from heart disease and stroke to the health benefits of marriage, a new study suggests.
Researchers analyzed data from 34 studies that were
published between 1963 and 2015. They included more than 2 million people
between the ages of 42 and 77, in Asia, Europe, the Middle East, North America
and Scandinavia.
(medicine.net)
The investigators found that, compared to married people,
those who were never married, divorced or widowed had a 42 percent higher risk
of cardiovascular disease, a 16 percent higher risk of coronary artery disease,
a 42 percent higher risk of death from coronary heart disease, and a 55 percent
higher risk of death from stroke.
The British researchers also found that among both men and
women, divorce was associated with a 35 percent higher risk of heart disease,
and that widowers were 16 percent more likely to have a stroke.
There was no difference in the risk of death following a
stroke between married and unmarried people. But those who had never married
were 42 percent more likely to die after a heart attack than those who were
married, the findings showed.
The researchers said their findings suggest that marital
status might be an independent risk factor for heart disease and stroke, and
for the likelihood of dying from those conditions.
But the study did not prove that marriage caused heart risks
to drop.
The findings were published online June 18 in the journal
Heart.
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