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By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter by Kathleen Doheny
healthday Reporter Tue Jun 16, 11:50 pm ET
TUESDAY, June 16 (HealthDay News) -- If you have a purpose in life -- lofty or
not -- you'll live longer, a new study shows.
It doesn't seem to matter much what the purpose is, or whether the purpose
involves a goal that's ambitious or modest.
"It can be anything -- from wanting to accomplish a goal in life, to achieving
something in a volunteer organization, to as little as reading a series of
books," said study author Dr. Patricia Boyle, a neuropsychologist at the Rush
Alzheimer's Disease Center and an assistant professor of behavioral sciences at
Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.
"We found that people who reported a greater level of purpose in life were
substantially less likely to die over the follow-up period -- only about half
as likely to die over the follow-up period -- as compared to people with a
lower level of purpose," Boyle said. The follow-up period averaged nearly three
years.
Boyle and her colleagues studied 1,238 older adults already participating in
two ongoing research studies at Rush, the Rush Memory and Aging Project and the
Minority Aging Research Study. The participants were all dementia-free when the
study began and averaged 78 years old.
At the start of the study, the participants answered questions about their
purpose in life, rating themselves on different areas meant to measure the
tendency to derive meaning from life and to feel that one is working toward
goals.
The average score on the sense-of-purpose evaluation was 3.7 of a possible 5,
Boyle said.
When comparing scores, Boyle found that those with a higher sense of purpose
had about half the risk of dying during the follow-up period as did those with
a lower sense of purpose. And that was true, she said, even after controlling
for such factors as depressive symptoms, chronic medical conditions and
disability.
"What this is saying is, if you find purpose in life, if you find your life is
meaningful and if you have goal-directed behavior, you are likely to live
longer," she said.
Though much other research has found that having a purpose in life is crucial
to maintaining psychological wellness and can be important for physical health
as well, Boyle said she believes the new study is one of the first large-scale
investigations to examine the link between life purpose and longevity.
The finding follows another recent study, done by others, in which the
researchers found that retirees older than 65 who volunteered had less than
half the risk of dying during about a four-year follow-up period as did their
peers who did not volunteer their time.
What's the link? Boyle can't say for sure. But it could be that having a
greater sense of purpose helps multiple systems of the body function better,
conferring protection in the face of illness.
The findings make sense to Dr. Gary Kennedy, director of geriatric psychiatry
at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. He said he often sees the
effects of not having a purpose among older patients. "I see a number of people
who have lost that purpose," he said. "Their health declines."
Still, he said, ''it's not clear there is cause and effect" between a sense of
purpose and longevity. Perhaps the longevity could be explained by another
variable the researchers did not examine, he said.
Boyle said that in future research they hope to find out if people can be
inspired to have purpose in life, perhaps by being taught to set goals and work
toward them.
More information
The U.S. Corporation for National and Community Service has more about the
benefits of volunteering.