Marital Happiness, Marital Status, Health, and Longevity

Married individuals are healthier and live longer than those who are never married, divorced, or widowed. But not all marriages are equal: unhappy marriages provide fewer benefits than happy ones. This study examined health and longevity across a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults, comb...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of happiness studies 2019-06, Vol.20 (5), p.1539-1561
Hauptverfasser: Lawrence, Elizabeth M., Rogers, Richard G., Zajacova, Anna, Wadsworth, Tim
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container_end_page 1561
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1539
container_title Journal of happiness studies
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creator Lawrence, Elizabeth M.
Rogers, Richard G.
Zajacova, Anna
Wadsworth, Tim
description Married individuals are healthier and live longer than those who are never married, divorced, or widowed. But not all marriages are equal: unhappy marriages provide fewer benefits than happy ones. This study examined health and longevity across a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults, combining measures of marital status and marital happiness to compare those who were “very happy” in marriage to those who were “pretty happy” in marriage, “not too happy” in marriage, never married, divorced or separated, or widowed. We employed the General Social Survey–National Death Index to illuminate the associations among marital status, marital happiness, general happiness, and self-rated health and mortality risk. Compared to individuals who were “very happily” married, those who were “not too happy” in marriage were over twice as likely to report worse health and almost 40% more likely to die over the follow-up period, net of socioeconomic, geographic, and religiosity factors. Those not too happy in marriage also had equal or worse health and mortality risk compared to those who were never married, divorced or separated, or widowed. Results further indicate that general happiness underlies much of the relationship between marital happiness and better health and longevity. The literature on the health and longevity benefits of marriage is well established, but our results suggest that individuals in unhappy marriages may be a vulnerable population. We conclude that subjective well-being and relationship quality contribute to the health benefits of marriage.
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source SpringerLink Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Divorce
Economics
Happiness
Health problems
Interpersonal relations
Marital status
Marriage
Mortality rates
Personality and Social Psychology
Philosophy
Positive Psychology
Quality
Quality of Life Research
Religiosity
Research Paper
Social Sciences
Socioeconomic factors
Vulnerability
Well being
title Marital Happiness, Marital Status, Health, and Longevity
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