Grade A for long-term health prognosis


I took a high-school classmate out to lunch today for his birthday.  Now in his late 50s, my friend has aged well – evidently as healthy as can be.  Being that he graduated 6th in our class, my buddy’s exceptional fitness of body and mind fits a profile of well-being that’s characteristic of individuals who excelled academically, according to this report by the New York Times.   In a nutshell, a long-term longitudinal study of over 10,000 aging students found that, by their early 60s, those near the top of their class were half as likely to report declines in health than their academically-inferior peers. It seems that the studs for studying end up being a lot heartier than the partyers.

“Academic performance is strongly linked to health in later life.”

–          Pamela Herd, associate professor of public affairs and sociology at the University of Wisconsin in Madison and study-author of Education and Health in Late-life among High School Graduates

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