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Less educated 'will age faster'

Pallab Ghosh By Pallab Ghosh Science correspondent, BBC News

People with fewer qualifications are prone to age more quickly, a study which

looked at 400 men and women says.

DNA evidence suggests cellular ageing is more advanced in adults with no

qualifications compared with those who have a university degree.

Experts think education might help people lead more healthy lives.

The British Heart Foundation said the London-based study, in journal Brain,

Behaviour and Immunity, reinforced the need to tackle social inequalities.

The connection between health and socioeconomic status is well established.

Those from poor backgrounds are more likely to smoke more, take less exercise

and have less access to good quality healthcare, compared with more wealthy

people.

But the new study suggests that education might be a more precise determinant

of a person's long term health rather than their current income and social

status.

The researchers suggest that education may enable people to make better

decisions that affect their long term health.

Start Quote

It's not acceptable that where you live or how much you earn - or lesser

academic attainment - should put you at greater risk of ill health

End Quote Professor Jeremy Pearson Associate Medical Director at the British

Heart Foundation

They also speculate that well qualified people might be under less long-term

stress, or be better able to deal with stress.

Professor Andrew Steptoe, from University College London, who led the study,

said: "Education is a marker of social class that people acquire early in life,

and our research suggests that it is long-term exposure to the conditions of

lower status that promotes accelerated cellular ageing."

Professor Steptoe's team took blood from more than 400 men and women aged

between 53 and 75.

They then measured the length of sections of DNA found at the ends of

chromosomes.

These sections - called "telomeres" - cap chromosomes, protecting them from

damage. Shorter telomeres are thought to be an indicator of faster ageing.

The results showed that people with lower educational attainment had shorter

telomeres, indicating that they may age faster.

They also indicated that telomere length was not affected by a person's social

and economic status later in life, as was previously thought.

Social factors

Professor Stephen Holgate, chairman of the Medical Research Council's

Population and Systems Medicine Board, said the key implication of the study

backs up the main message from long-term studies funded by the Medical Research

Council for over half a century.

"Your experiences early in life can have important influences on your health,"

he explained.

"Whilst - as with all observational research - it is difficult to establish the

root causes of the findings, this study does provide evidence that being

educated to a higher level can benefit you more than in the job market alone."

Professor Jeremy Pearson, associate medical director at the British Heart

Foundation, said the research reinforces the need to tackle social inequalities

to combat ill-health.

He said: "It's not acceptable that where you live or how much you earn - or

lesser academic attainment - should put you at greater risk of ill health."

The researchers were based primarily at University College London, but also

collaborated with experts at the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff and the

University of California, San Francisco.