- Abusive Coaches (5)
- ADHD (5)
- Alamo CA (42)
- Alexithymia (38)
- Altruism (24)
- Anger in the workplace (2)
- Anger Management (91)
- Anger management therapy (12)
- Anxiety (72)
- Apologies (2)
- Assertiveness (34)
- Awareness (53)
- Awe & Elevation (9)
- Brain plasticity (17)
- Brand Equity (6)
- Bullies (24)
- Business & psych (63)
- Chief Marketing Officer (9)
- Consciousness (50)
- Corporate Culture (22)
- Counseling (25)
- Courage and Anxiety (4)
- Creativity (56)
- Curiosity (47)
- Customer Engagement (34)
- Danville CA (125)
- De-escalating anger (30)
- Dealing with loss (7)
- Depression (69)
- Dr. John Schinnerer (276)
- Emotion & Athletics (20)
- Emotion & learning (72)
- Emotion & productivity (80)
- Emotion and technology (17)
- Emotion recognition software (4)
- Emotional IQ (167)
- Emotional management (168)
- Emotional mind (171)
- Emotional terrorists (4)
- Employee engagement (30)
- Employment Testing (1)
- Energy psychology (12)
- Ethics (8)
- Executive coach (65)
- Executive leadership (12)
- Failure as teacher (1)
- Forgiveness (58)
- Free self-help book (6)
- Gender differences (10)
- Gratitude (36)
- Guide to Self (175)
- Guide To Self Beginners Guide To Managing Emotion (213)
- Guilt (1)
- Happiness (164)
- Happiness and Income (7)
- Hope (69)
- Infinet Assessment (31)
- Innovative brand research (18)
- International Wellbeing Study (23)
- keys to happiness (7)
- Life coach (116)
- Managing anger (5)
- Managing Anxiety (74)
- Managing Sadness (63)
- Managing stress (116)
- Meaning-making (14)
- Measuring emotions (35)
- Memory and recall (6)
- Men and Women (4)
- Men's emotions (117)
- Men's feelings (23)
- Mindfulness (75)
- Morals and values (37)
- Music psychology (20)
- National speakers (86)
- Nature vs. nurture (9)
- Negotiation and emotion (7)
- Nervousness (21)
- Neuromarketing (3)
- Neuropsychology (7)
- Optimal Human Functioning (74)
- Organizational change initiatives (15)
- Organizational psychology (29)
- Overcoming failure (11)
- Oxytocin (1)
- Parenting (44)
- Parenting adolescents (11)
- Parenting workshop (4)
- Penalty Kick Success (2)
- Physician burnout (4)
- Positive emotions and job search (6)
- Positive expectations (15)
- Positive mood music (26)
- Positive Psychology (183)
- Psychological Humor - Jokes (5)
- Psychology & soccer (14)
- Psychology and technology (4)
- Psychology humor (12)
- Psychology of Success (2)
- Psychoneuroimmunology (5)
- Pursuing Purpose (7)
- Raising optimistic children (16)
- Rational mind (29)
- Reading terrorists minds (2)
- Real Men Real Emotion (28)
- Realistic optimism (61)
- Relationship problems (1)
- Relationships (43)
- Resiliency (105)
- San Francisco Bay Area (59)
- San Ramon CA (46)
- School age bullies (15)
- School psychology (15)
- Science of love (29)
- Self-compassion (20)
- Self-help book (12)
- Self-improvement book (5)
- Self-motivation (2)
- Sleep research (4)
- Soccer psychology (5)
- Social anxiety disorder (19)
- Social phobia (15)
- Sports Psychology (36)
- SRVHS (5)
- Staying calm (75)
- Subconscious mind (32)
- Subliminal messages (5)
- Swim coaches (5)
- The human brain (85)
- Tips to help anxiety (38)
- Unique marketing research (16)
- Unsconscious mind (7)
- Values and ethics (5)
- Victims of bullying (12)
- Violence and abuse (7)
- Visual Attention (10)
- Visual perception (7)
- Well-being (57)
- Workplace bullies (4)
- 26. August 2010: Human Emotions Powerfully Influence Physical Health Throughout World
- 24. August 2010: Failure better teacher than success. Knowledge from failure lasts longer - U of Colorado Bus. School
- 24. August 2010: Both Mom AND Dad Get Boost in Oxytocin After Baby - New Study
- 21. August 2010: Comprehensive Soldier Fitness: A Holistic Approach to Warrior Training
- 21. August 2010: Workplace Wellness Plan Saves Money Over the Long-Term, New Study Shows
- 20. August 2010: Happy Employees Seem To Hold Key to Profitable Organizations
- 13. August 2010: Student Rehab - 12 Step Program for the Digitally Addicted
- 12. August 2010: Check This Out - The Psychology of Wellbeing
- 12. August 2010: Anger Management Training Continues Play in Media
- 12. August 2010: How to Get What You Want: Get More Frikkin' Assertive!
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- June 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- November 2007
- October 2007
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
- July 2006
- May 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
- February 2006
- January 2006
- December 2005
- November 2005
- October 2005
- September 2005
- August 2005
- July 2005
- June 2005
- May 2005
New Study Shows Positive Emotions Protect Against Heart Disease
A first of kind study was released this past week by The European Society of Cardiology showing that individuals who experience positive emotions more frequently are less likely to succumb to heart disease (as compared to those who feel positive emotions less frequently or less intensely).
They sent out the following news release regarding the study which appears in European Heart Journal.
Don’t worry, be happy! Positive emotions protect against heart disease
People who are usually happy, enthusiastic and content are less likely to develop heart disease than those who tend not to be happy, according to a major new study published today (Thursday 18 February).
The authors believe that the study, published in the Europe’s leading cardiology journal, the European Heart Journal [1], is the first to show such an independent relationship between positive emotions and coronary heart disease.
Dr Karina Davidson, who led the research, said that although this was an observational study, her study did suggest that it might be possible to help prevent heart disease by enhancing people’s positive emotions.
However, she cautioned that it would be premature to make clinical recommendations without clinical trials to investigate the findings further.
‘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,’ said Dr Davidson, who is the Herbert Irving Associate Professor of Medicine & Psychiatry and Director of the Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health at Columbia University Medical Center (New York, USA).
Over a period of ten years, Dr Davidson and her colleagues followed 1,739 healthy adults (862 men and 877 women) who were participating in the 1995 Nova Scotia Health Survey. At the start of the study, trained nurses assessed the participants’ risk of heart disease and, with both self-reporting and clinical assessment, they measured symptoms of depression, hostility, anxiety and the degree of expression of positive emotions, which is known as ‘positive affect.’
Positive affect is defined as the experience of pleasurable emotions such as joy, happiness, excitement, enthusiasm and contentment. These feelings can be transient, but they are usually stable and trait-like, particularly in adulthood. Positive affect is largely independent of negative affect, so that someone who is generally a happy, contented person can also be occasionally anxious, angry or depressed.
After taking account of age, sex, cardiovascular risk factors and negative emotions, the researchers found that, over the ten-year period, increased positive affect predicted less risk of heart disease by 22% per point on a five-point scale measuring levels of positive affect expression (ranging from “none” to “extreme”).
Dr Davidson said: ‘Participants with no positive affect were at a 22% higher risk of ischaemic heart disease (heart attack or angina) than those with a little positive affect, who were themselves at 22% higher risk than those with moderate positive affect.’
‘We also found that if someone, who was usually positive, had some depressive symptoms at the time of the survey, this did not affect their overall lower risk of heart disease.’
‘As far as we know, this is the first prospective study to examine the relationship between clinically-assessed positive affect and heart disease.’
The researchers speculate about what could be the possible mechanisms by which positive emotions might be responsible for conferring long-term protection from heart disease. These include influence on heart rates, sleeping patterns and smoking cessation.
“We have several possible explanations,” said Dr Davidson. “First, those with positive affect may have longer periods of rest or relaxation physiologically. Baroreflex and parasympathetic regulation may, therefore, by superior in these persons, compared to those with little positive affect. Second, those with positive affect may recover more quickly from stressors, and may not spend as much time ‘re-living’ them, which in turn seems to cause physiological damage. This is speculative, as we are just beginning to explore why positive emotions and happiness have positive health benefits.”
She said that most successful interventions for depression include increasing positive affect as well as decreasing negative affect. If clinical trials supported the findings of this study, then it would be relatively easy to assess positive affect in patients and suggest interventions to improve it to help prevent heart disease. In the meantime, people reading about this research could take some simple steps to increase their positive affect.
‘Like the observational finding that moderate wine consumption is healthy (and enjoyable), at this point ordinary people can ensure they have some pleasurable activities in their daily lives,’ she said. ‘Some people wait for their two weeks of vacation to have fun, and that would be analogous to binge drinking (moderation and consistency, not deprivation and binging, is what is needed). If you enjoy reading novels, but never get around to it, commit to getting 15 minutes or so of reading in. If walking or listening to music improves your mood, get those activities in your schedule. Essentially, spending some few minutes each day truly relaxed and enjoying yourself is certainly good for your mental health, and may improve your physical health as well (although this is, as yet, not confirmed).’
In an accompanying editorial by Bertram Pitt, Professor of Internal Medicine, and Patricia Deldin, Associate Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry, both at the University of Michigan School of Medicine (Michigan, USA), the authors pointed out that, currently, no one knew whether positive affect had a direct or indirect causal role in heart disease, or whether there was a third, underlying factor at work, common to both conditions. Nor was it known for certain whether it was possible to modify and improve positive affect, and to what extent.
‘Randomised controlled trials of interventions to increase positive affect in patients with cardiovascular disease are now underway and will help determine the effectiveness of increasing positive affect on cardiovascular outcome and will provide insight into the nature of the relationship between positive affect and cardiovascular disease,’ they wrote.
‘The ‘vicious cycle’ linking cardiovascular disease to major depression and depression to cardiovascular disease deserves greater attention from both the cardiovascular and psychiatric investigators……..These new treatments [to increase positive affect] could open an exciting potential new approach for treating patients with known cardiovascular disease who develop depression. If Davidson et al.’s observations and hypotheses stimulate further investigation regarding the effect of increased positive affect on physiological abnormalities associated with cardiovascular risk, perhaps it will be time for all of us to smile.’
Notes:
[1] ‘Don’t worry, be happy: positive affect and reduced 10-year incident coronary heart disease: The Canadian Nova Scotia Health Survey.’ European Heart Journal. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehp603.
[2] ‘Depression and cardiovascular disease: have a happy day - just smile!’. European Heart Journal. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehq031
We may as well add this to the growing mountain of research documenting the tremendous potential of positive emotions (currently there are more than 65,000 studies documenting the positive impact on optimal human functioning of happiness, life satisfaction, subjective well-being, and positive emotions). Think of it as a matter of degree and frequency that we’re trying to increase. It’s not a black or white issue in which positive psychology is saying you have to be happy all the time. That would be absurd. Rather, the idea is to increase the amount of time (as well as the intensity and duration) you spend in positive emotional states such as contentment, relaxation, curiosity, awe, pride, love, joy, laughter, hope, amusement and so on. And positive emotions is just one of the areas covered by positive psychology.
Have a tremendous day!
John Schinnerer, Ph.D.
Positive Psychology Coach
Author of the award winning ‘Guide To Self: The Beginner’s Guide To Managing Emotion and Thought’
Follow John on Twitter at @johnschin
< -->
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.