Study: Parenthood can boost your longevity – Detroit Free Press – Detroit Free Press

Ana Veciana-Suarez, Miami Herald (TNS) 11:08 p.m. ET March 18, 2017

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A study out of Sweden says parenting can extend your life.(Photo: David Sacks/Getty Images)

Want to live longer? Have children.

If you don't die early from child-rearing stress, parenthood will boost your longevity chances, according to a new study out of Sweden.

Researchers at the Karolinska Institute used national registry data to track 1.5 million Swedes born between 1911 and 1925 as they lived through their last years.

While the risk of death naturally increased with age for all adults, the team found that those with children had greater longevity.

"Support from adult children to aging parents may be of importance for parental health and longevity," researchers write. "At old age, the stress of parenthood is likely to be lower and instead, parents can benefit from social support from their children. In addition, parents have on average more healthful behaviors than childless individuals."

The study, published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, also revealed that having children is actually more beneficial as you age, and it is particularly greater for men than women.

Men who were not married but had children were also living longer than those with a spouse. For example, 60-year-old men who had children had about two years more of life than those without, with a life expectancy of 20.2 and 18.4 years respectively.

Bag of toys in a bathtub(Photo: Creatas Images via Getty Images)

For women at 60, those with children had life expectancies of 24.6 years while those without children had 23.1.

The life expectancy difference continued as the study group grew older. By 80, parents had a life expectancy of 7.7 years for men and 9.5 years for women. In comparison, the 80-year-olds without children had a life expectancy of 7 years for men without children and 8.9 years for women without children.

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The sex of the child had no influence on their parent's longevity, according to researchers, but it should be noted that this finding was based only on families with one child.

"Perhaps being the only child is related to a greater responsibility of parents, reducing the difference in the amount of help given by sons and daughters," they study authors write.

Of course parenthood isn't the only thing boosting longevity.

"In terms of all other causes that would affect your death risk in these old ages, having a child is not among the greatest ones," study co-author Karin Modig told The Guardian. "But it is still a 1.5 percent difference [for 90-year-old men] which is still substantial."

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