![Cover image for The longevity project [large print] : surprising discoveries for health and long life from the landmark eight-decade study Cover image for The longevity project [large print] : surprising discoveries for health and long life from the landmark eight-decade study](/client/assets/5.523.17/ctx//client/images/no_image.png)
Title:
The longevity project [large print] : surprising discoveries for health and long life from the landmark eight-decade study
Edition:
Large print ed.
Publication Date:
2011
Publication Information:
Thorndike, Me. : Center Point Pub., c2011.
Physical Description:
398 p. ; 23 cm.
ISBN:
9781611731392
Abstract:
Drs. Howard Friedman and Leslie Martin studied 1,500 people at Stanford University to find out who lives the longest and why. Their book documents the findings of this study, discusses the character traits they found associated with long life, and addresses some of the common myths about longevity. We've been told that to live long we should obsess over what we eat, how much we stress, and how fast we run. But based on the most extensive study of longevity ever conducted, eating your vegetables, exercising, and relaxation -- though important -- are not the critical components to long life. Here, Drs. Friedman and Martin bust many a myth. People do not die from working long hours at a challenging job. Getting and staying married is not the magic ticket to long life, especially if you're a woman. It's not the happy-go-lucky people who thrive.
General Note:
Originally published: New York : Hudson Street Press, 2010.
Contents:
Personality and long life: Who stays well? -- Long live the prudent and persistent -- Friendly and convivial: Healthy or trivial? -- Happiness and health? A cheery conundrum -- Catastrophic thinking: The fates of Chicken Littles -- Childhood and school days: Head start, early finish -- Parental divorce: Some were resilient -- Running for their lives: Jocks vs. nerds -- To sickness or to health? Love, marriage, and divorce -- Careers, success, and satisfaction: Thriving and surviving -- Long life meets the afterlife: Religion and health -- Confidants, networks, and the power of social life -- The gender gap in long life -- The toll of war and trauma: Why some thrive -- Individual paths to health and long life ( and why we won't take polypills) -- Long life and public health: Looking ahead to what society should do.
Subject Term:
Language:
English