People with high genetic risk but a favourable lifestyle were twice as likely to live longer than those with an unfavourable ...
Physical activity. People with the lowest risk met the recommended Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, which suggests ...
A healthy lifestyle may offset the effects of life-shortening genes by more than 60%, suggests an analysis of the findings from several large long term studies, published online in the journal BMJ ...
What makes us live long lives, nature or nurture? Research suggests both, but lifestyle choices may be able to cancel out the ...
Both men and women will live longer by 2050, thanks to fewer deaths from infectious diseases, malnutrition, and childbirth.
Life expectancy around the world is expected to increase by nearly 5 years in men and more than 4 years in women during the ...
Scientists expose the lifelong impact of childhood abuse and neglect. A study focusing on childhood maltreatment in Australia ...
New research being presented at the European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Venice, Italy (12-15 May) has, for the first time, quantified the impact of different aspects of childhood obesity on ...
The Allen Institute for Immunology, a division of the Seattle-based Allen Institute, is teaming with Seattle Children’s Research Institute to launch a study aimed at understanding the origins of ...
The world has become a much safer place to be a young child in the last 50 years. Since 1974, infant mortality worldwide has plummeted. That year, one in 10 newborns died before reaching their ...
New research suggests that healthy lifestyle choices can significantly reduce the risk of early death, even for people with a genetic predisposition to it. The study, involving over 350,000 ...
Even if your genetics put you at greater risk for early death, a healthy lifestyle could help you significantly combat it, ...