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2011-04-07 12:32:06
By Helen Briggs Health reporter, BBC News
Shopping prolongs life, at least for the over 65s in Taiwan, according to
research.
Even after adjusting for factors like physical and mental infirmity, men and
women who shopped daily lived longer than those who shunned retail therapy, say
scientists.
Shopping may provide companionship, exercise and an opportunity to maintain a
healthy diet, they report in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.
A leading UK expert said the findings "made sense" since shopping involves
physical activity, social interaction and keeping mentally active.
In the study, published online in the academic journal, researchers led by Dr
Yu-Hung Chang of the Institute of Population Health Sciences, Taiwan, studied
nearly 2,000 men and women aged 65 and over who lived in their own homes.
They found those who shopped regularly lived longer than those who shopped just
once a week or less, even after adjusting for factors such as physical
limitations and cognitive decline.
Continue reading the main story
The data
registries between 1999 and 2008
infrequently, with the biggest effect seen in men
They acknowledge that shopping could be a marker for those in good health to
begin with, but suggest shopping itself may improve health.
"Shopping is often for pleasure with the potential to increase psychological
wellbeing," they conclude.
"Compared to other types of leisure-time physical activity, like formal
exercise, which usually requires motivation and sometimes professional
instruction, shopping activity is easier to undertake and maintain."
David Oliver, visiting professor of medicine for older people at City
University, London, said the findings "made sense".
He told the BBC: "What the Taiwanese researchers have shown is that continuing
to shop is independently predictive of better well-being and longer life.
"Shopping is going to involve physical activity, social interaction with other
shoppers and because it's quite a complex task it's going to keep you mentally
active.
"It makes sense that it would be a predictor of better physical and
psychological well-being."