Happiness makes for a healthy heart

LONDON, (Reuters) – People who are usually happy and  enthusiastic are less likely to develop heart disease than those  who tend to be glum, scientists said yesterday, and boosting  positive emotions could help cut heart health risks. U.S. researchers said their observational study was the  first to show an independent relationship between positive  emotions and coronary heart disease, but stressed that more work  was needed before any treatment recommendations could be made.

“We desperately need rigorous clinical trials in this area.  If the trials support our findings, then these results will be  incredibly important in describing specifically what clinicians  and/or patients could do to improve health,” Karina Davidson of  Columbia University Medical Center wrote in the study in the  European Heart Journal.

Heart disease is the leading killer of men and women in  Europe, the United States and most industrialised countries.  Together with diabetes, cardiovascular diseases accounted for 32  percent of all deaths around the world in 2005, according to the  World Health Organisation. Over 10 years, Davidson and her team followed 1,739 men and  women who were taking part in a large health survey in Canada.

Trained nurses assessed the participants’ heart disease risk  and measured negative emotions like depression, hostility and  anxiety, as well as positive emotions like joy, happiness,  excitement, enthusiasm and contentment — collectively known as  a “positive affect”.

The researchers ranked the “positive affect” across five  levels ranging from “none” to “extreme” and found that for each  rank the risk of heart disease fell by 22 percent.

Davidson, who led the research, said her findings suggested  it might be possible to help prevent heart disease by enhancing  people’s positive emotions. “Participants with no positive affect were at a 22 percent  higher risk of … heart attack or angina … than those with a  little positive affect, who were themselves at 22 percent higher  risk than those with moderate positive affect,” she wrote.