Happy People Live Longer: Subjective Well-Being Contributes to Health and Longevity
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Indexed incrossref
Abstract
Seven types of evidence are reviewed that indicate that high subjective well-being (such as life satisfaction, absence of negative emotions, optimism, and positive emotions) causes better health and longevity. For example, prospective longitudinal studies of normal populations provide evidence that various types of subjective well-being such as positive affect predict health and longevity, controlling for health and socioeconomic status at baseline. Combined with experimental human and animal research, as well as naturalistic studies of changes of subjective well-being and physiological processes over time, the case that subjective well-being influences health and longevity in healthy populations is…
Citation impact
732
total citations
- FWCI
- —
- Percentile
- —
- References
- 150
Citations per year
Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Longevity
- Psychology
- Gerontology
- Social psychology
- Medicine
No related works found for this paper.