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Fight The Cold
By Being Happy
People who are energetic, happy and relaxed are less
likely to catch colds, while those who are depressed,
nervous or angry are more likely to complain about
cold symptoms, whether or not they get bitten by the
cold bug, according to a recent study.
Study participants who had a positive emotional style
weren't infected as often and experienced fewer
symptoms compared to people with a negative emotional
style, say Sheldon Cohen, Ph.D., of Carnegie Mellon
University and colleagues, writing in the July issue
of Psychosomatic Medicine.
Cohen's team
interviewed 334 healthy volunteers three evenings a
week for two weeks to assess their emotional states.
The volunteers described how they felt that day in
three positive-emotion areas: vigor, well-being and
calm. They were also questioned about three categories
of negative feelings: depression, anxiety and
hostility.
Other scientists
have speculated that people who typically report
experiencing negative emotions are at greater risk for
disease and those who report positive emotions have
less risk, says Cohen.
After their
assessment, each volunteer got a squirt in the nose of
a rhinovirus -- the germ that causes colds. The
researchers kept the subjects under observation for
five days to see whether or not they became infected
and how they manifested symptoms.
"We found that experiencing positive emotions was
associated with greater resistance to developing a
common cold," Cohen reports. "Increases in
positive emotional styles were linked with decreases
in the rate of clinical colds, but a negative
emotional style had no effect on whether or not people
got sick."
A positive emotional
style actually had no effect on how often volunteers
were infected (as measured by replication of the
virus) but produced fewer signs and symptoms of the
illness, says Cohen. This suggests that inflammatory
chemicals produced by the body may link the positive
emotional style with colds.
Further analysis revealed that good health practices
and lower levels of certain hormones did not account
for the link between positive emotional style and
illness.
Since the average person catches two to five colds a
year, developing psychological risk profiles and
considering ways to enhance positive emotion might
reduce the risk of colds -- and by extension, other
infectious diseases.
The study was supported by grants from the National
Institute of Mental Health and the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Network on
Socioeconomic Status and Health.
By Center For The Advancement Of Health
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