Interesting Health Articles


When Marriage Can Hurt a Heart Article

When Marriage Can Hurt a Heart

Marital Strain Can Raise Risk of Death, Heart Disease

Marital strain is a home wrecker that can endanger the heart. So says a 10-year study of 3,000 men and women aged 18
to 77.

All participants were married or living in a "marital situation." The researchers collected data on marital discord.
Health was tracked for a decade to see who developed heart disease or died of any cause during the study.

For both men and women, marital strain affected their health.

Marital Strain and the Married Couple

The worst health risk was seen in women who hushed up when conflicts arose with their spouse. They said they usually
or always silenced themselves in such situations.

Those women might have thought they were keeping the peace, but they paid dearly for it. Women who kept mum in
marital conflicts had four times the risk of dying during the study, compared with women who spoke their minds.

For men, emotional expression wasn't the issue. Instead, their hearts suffered when they saw their wives come home
from work burdened by job stress.

"Men reporting that their wives' work was disruptive to their lives were 2.7 times more likely to develop heart
disease," say the researchers, who included Elaine Eaker, ScD, of Wisconsin-based Eaker Epidemiology Enterprises. The
findings were reported in Orlando, Fla., at the Second International Conference on Women, Heart Disease, and Stroke.

A Health Perk for Husbands

Married men were about half as likely as single men to die of any cause during the study. That finding held true
after adjusting for blood pressure, body mass index, smoking, diabetes, and cholesterol.

Single men were more likely than husbands to be smokers, says Eaker, in a news release. Past studies have also shown
a health advantage for married men.

For women, marital status wasn't linked to heart disease or dying. The connection emerged when Eaker used more
contemporary measures of marital strain, such as "self-silencing" behavior.

What's a Couple to Do?

Learning to handle conflict and defuse stress is a healthy idea for everyone. Counseling can help with that, with
therapists available for individuals and couples. Doctors may also want to ask their patients about stress and make
counseling referrals as needed, says Eaker.

Manufacturers
4ever
Apex
BSN
Champion
Clif
Costas
Cytodyne
Cytosport
Dynamic
Ergopharm
Fizogen
Flexstar
iForce
ISS
MAN
MHP
MMUSA
Molecular
MRM
Next
Nutrabolics
Nutraceutics
Nutrex
NVE
NxCare
Pacific Health Labs
PBL
Pharmalogics
Pinnacle
Prolab
Promatrix
Promax
Pure Life
SAN
Shaker Pro
Supplements
Syntrax
Thermolife
Trimspa
Twinlab
Vitalstate
VPX
VyoTech