Dispositional Optimism Protects Older Adults from Stroke: The Health and Retirement Study

Date Published: 
October 2011
Researcher(s): 
Kim ES, Park N, and Peterson C
Abstract: 

Data from the Health and Retirement Study, a nationally representative study of people age 50 and older, was used to assess whether individuals with optimistic attitudes had lower incidence of stroke. The study collects information on the health of 22,000 Americans every two years. For this analysis, people with a history of stroke and those with incomplete information at follow-up were excluded, yielding a subset of 6,044 adult participants, average age 68.5 years.

Respondents were asked to rate three optimism items on a scale of one to six for a total possible score of 18 (higher being more optimistic). After adjusting for chronic illnesses, self-rated health, and relevant sociodemographic, behavioral, biological and psychological factors, dispositional optimism—the general expectation that more good things, rather than bad will occur in the future—was associated with a reduced risk of stroke. Each unit increase in optimism was associated with a 9 percent reduced risk of stroke two years later.

People who are optimistic have a positive outlook on life and may choose to have a healthier lifestyle than those who are pessimistic—and that may increase their health and well-being. Exactly why and how optimism plays a protective role against stroke, however, warrants further investigation.

Self Published: 
No
Health Assets: 
Optimism
Health Conditions: 
Stroke
Positive Health Type: 
Subjective
RWJF Grant-Funded: 
Yes