http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090327/hl_nm/us_multi_generational;_ylt=AqiX9odpamRvckZ1wtS6BRnVJRIF
Fri Mar 27, 2:55 pm ET
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Women, but not men, who live in households with a spouse, children, and parents have double the risk for a coronary event, such as a heart attack or need for heart surgery, as women who live only with a spouse, according to research from Japan.
Stress may play a role in this increased risk, as about a quarter of the women living in a three-generation household or living with a spouse and parent reported high stress. Fewer women were highly stressed when they lived alone, with a spouse, or with a spouse and child, Professor H. Iso and colleagues report in the journal Heart.
Iso, of Osaka University, and colleagues assessed coronary heart disease events and deaths in relation to the living arrangements reported by nearly 91,000 Japanese men and women who were 40 to 69 years old.
Over 11 years of follow up, Iso's team noted no significant impact on CHD incidence among the men in the study.
However, among the women, those living in three-generation households had twice the risk for heart-related events as women living only with a spouse. Moreover, women living with spouses and parents had triple the risk for heart problems compared with women living only with a spouse.
These findings are relevant for Japanese health policy, Iso and colleagues surmise, particularly in light of the increasing female workforce, the declining marriage rate, and the rapid aging of the population in Japan.
SOURCE: Heart, April 2009.
2 comments:
Hi PATRICIA Shannon, not just Shannon.
What about if they lived under two roofs instead of one, at opposite ends of the garden. That ought to remove a lot of the strain don't you think?
It would depend on the individuals and their situation, I would expect. Some parents would still be very intrusive.
Post a Comment