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2009-07-28 04:00:51
Divorce has a lingering, detrimental impact on health that even remarriage
cannot fully repair, a study suggests.
A Chicago study involving 8,652 people aged 51 to 61 found divorced people have
20% more chronic illnesses such as cancer than those who never marry.
The figure only drops to 12% for those who remarry, researchers write in the
Journal of Health and Social Behaviour.
They say we start adulthood with a "health stock" that is kept or eroded
depending on our marital experience.
Only those who are continuously married can expect the same rate of chronic
health problems as the never-wedded, the study suggests.
It's another reason to work hard to make marriages last, unless it is a very
destructive relationship
Christine Northan, a counsellor for Relate
Although people who remarry after a divorce or being widowed do tend to be
happier as a result - being no more depressed than those continuously married
and less depressed than those who never married - they gain little in terms of
chronic health conditions.
People who remarried had 12% more chronic health conditions than those
continuously married, which was slightly less than the 20% for the divorced or
widowed who did not remarry.
Researcher Dr Linda Waite, a sociologist at the University of Chicago, said
divorce or widowhood undermines health because incomes drop and stress develops
over issues such as shared child care.
Stresses and strains
Whereas marriage tends to bring an immediate health benefit, in that it
improves health behaviours for men and financial well-being for women.
But remarriage does not heal all.
She said: "Some health situations, like depression, seem to respond both
quickly and strongly to changes in current conditions.
"In contrast, conditions such as diabetes and heart disease develop slowly over
a substantial period and show the impact of past experiences, which is why
health is undermined by divorce or widowhood, even when a person remarries."
Anastasia de Waal, of the think tank Civitas, said: "This research highlights
the fact that whilst divorce has become much more common, it can take not just
a tremendous emotional and financial toll, but also a heavy health one."
Christine Northan, a counsellor for Relate, said: "I'm not surprised by the
findings. It's another reason to work hard to make marriages last, unless it is
a very destructive relationship.
"It's a good idea if you can use a messy divorce to understand both yourself
better and why the relationship did not work.
"If you do that, you will be in a better place to go into a second successful
marriage.
"But if you are drawn to people who are toxic for you, then you may be better
off staying single."
She said a surprising number of people unconsciously look for someone like
their first wife or husband and that the chance of a second marriage ending in
divorce was two-fold.