Members in the Media
From: CBS News

Marriage tied to longer survival after heart bypass

CBS News:

Married people have a better shot at long-term survival after heart bypass surgery. In fact, happily married husbands and wives who have the surgery are more than three times as likely as single folks to be alive 15 years later, a new study showed.

The life-sustaining benefit of marriage is “every bit as important to survival after bypass surgery as more traditional risk factors like tobacco use, obesity, and high blood pressure,” study author Dr. Harry Reis, a professor of psychology at the University of Rochester, said in a written statement.

For the study – published in the August 22 issue of the journal Health Psychology – researchers tracked the health of 225 men and women who had undergone bypass surgery between 1987 and 1990. Fifteen years later, 83 percent of happily married wives were still alive, compared with 28 percent of women who were in unhappy marriages and 27 percent of unmarried women.

Read the whole story: CBS News

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