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 ...
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.
A new study from China shows maintaining a healthy lifestyle can reduce your risk of dying early by 62% even if a person has a genetic disposition that would cause them to die early.
Life expectancy around the world is expected to increase by nearly 5 years in men and more than 4 years in women during the ...
High-performance runners get an extra five years of healthy life, on average, compared with the general population, according ...
Scientists expose the lifelong impact of childhood abuse and neglect. A study focusing on childhood maltreatment in Australia ...
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 ...
A 2016 study conducted by Journal of the American Heart Association tested the theory in New Zealand, specifically focusing on the link between the U.S.’s cold climate during the holiday season ...
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, ...