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Cooking At Home Increases Longevity

For those of you who use your stove for shoe storage, nota bene: all that wasted time with an inactive kitchen could be shortening your lifespan. In fact, a new study found that people who cook up to five times a week were 47 percent more likely to still be alive after 10 years.
"It has
become clear that cooking is a healthy behavior," said lead author
Professor Mark Wahlqvist in a statement. "It deserves a place in life-long
education, public health policy, urban planning and household economics."
The
research team, made up of Taiwanese and Australian researchers, published their
work in Public Health Nutrition,
a Cambridge University journal after looking at a group of 1,888 men and women
over age 65 who lived in Taiwan. At the start of the study, they interviewed
each participant about several lifestyle factors, including cooking habits,
household circumstances, shopping habits, diet, education, transportation and
smoking.
During the
initial survey, researchers found that 43 percent of participants never cooked,
while 17 percent cooked one to two times per week, 9 percent cooked three to
five times in a week and 31 percent cooked five or more times a week.
After 10
years, they followed up to see how many of the participants had died. They then
matched lifestyle answers to the 1,193 participants who remained alive. The
researchers discovered that frequent cooking was associated with survival. Also
associated? Grocery shopping, taking public transportation, not smoking, and
being a woman. Frequent cooking -- and survival -- was more common among women
and most profoundly among unmarried women, though also among women with
families.
There were
limitations to the study: women generally live longer than men and, for
cultural reasons, women were more practiced at cooking than men. Additionally,
those who remained healthy were more able to perform errands related to
cooking, like shopping for food, walking and taking public transportation. The
truly ailing wouldn't be able to cook because
of their health -- not the other way around.
But even
after researchers controlled for these other factors, they found an association
between frequent home cooking and longevity. "The pathways to health that
food provides are not limited to its nutrients or components, but extend to
each step in the food chain, from its production, to purchase, preparation and
eating, especially with others," added Wahlqvist.
Courtesy: Huffington Post


