Positive life experiences and mortality: Examination of psychobiological pathways.

Soc Sci Med

Department of Psychology, Chapman University, USA. Electronic address:

Published: October 2023

Introduction And Rationale: Positive life experiences are potentially-rewarding events and behaviors, such as social and romantic interactions, experiences of relaxation and physical comfort, time spent in nature, and other leisure activities. To date, there is limited evidence linking positive life experiences to long-term health outcomes.

Objective And Methods: The current study used data from N = 1243 participants in the Midlife Development in the US Study Biomarker Project to examine whether greater frequency of a range of different positive experiences and greater level of enjoyment of these experiences was linked to survival over a 12- to-16-year period in Cox proportional hazards models. The potential mediating roles of positive affect, depression, perceived stress, and an allostatic load index of physiological dysregulation in these associations were also examined.

Results: Greater frequency of positive experiences and greater enjoyment of positive experiences were both associated with a reduced hazard of mortality over the 12- to 16-year period. Models assessing a single mediator showed that both associations were mediated by decreased depression and decreased perceived stress, but not by positive affect or allostatic load. In supplementary multi-mediation models, depression was the only significant mediator of the frequency-survival and enjoyment-survival associations.

Conclusions: Positive life experiences may confer long-term survival benefits, partially through lessening depressive symptomatology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116192DOI Listing

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