Good habits, long life



Good habits, long life
LOS ANGELES TIMES
It's not easy to reach middle age without accruing at least one bad health habit or risk factor. But men who do so are often rewarded with a long life.
That's according to a study that followed more than 5,800 Japanese American middle-age men in Hawaii beginning in 1965. Researchers studied the men, whose average age was 54, for up to 40 years. Those who, at the beginning of the study, had avoided risk factors such as smoking, being overweight, drinking excessively, and developing hypertension and high blood sugar, had a good chance of reaching old age.
The chance of survival to age 85 is as high as 69 percent in men with no risk factors at middle age and as low as 22 percent in men with six or more risk factors. Grip strength -- a measure of physical fitness -- was associated with longevity, while not having a marital partner was associated with death before 85.
The study, funded by the National Institute on Aging, was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.