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Research Highlight: Better satisfaction with aging could improve health and well-being | 2021-22 Fellow Julia Nakamura

Published: 16 February 2022

New research from 2021-22 CAnD3 Fellow Julia Nakamura听and colleagues听finds that higher satisfaction with aging could lead to improved health and well-being outcomes. Using data from the Health and Retirement Study, a cohort of 13,752 US adults over 50 years old, the researchers used 35 indicators of physical, behavioral, and psychosocial health and well-being to capture a comprehensive suite of outcomes. Out of the 35 indicators, improvements in 27 were associated with better aging satisfaction.听

"With further research, our findings suggest that interventions to increase aging satisfaction might improve the health and wellbeing of our rapidly growing older adult population," said Julia in an .

Read the paper

Nakamura, J. S., Hong, J. H., Smith, J., Chopik, W. J., Chen, Y., VanderWeele, T. J., & Kim, E. S. (2022). Associations Between Satisfaction With Aging and Health and Well-being Outcomes Among Older US Adults. JAMA Network Open, 5(2), e2147797.

Read the听UBC news releases

More about Julia

Circular head shot of Julia, a 2021-22 CAnD3 Fellow

Julia Nakamura is a Master鈥檚 student in the Health Psychology Program at the University of British Columbia. Julia is interested in the aspects of psychological well-being that positively influence physical health outcomes, health behaviors, and psychosocial well-being in older adults. Her research lies at the intersection of health psychology, psychological well-being, gerontology, epidemiology, and translational science (e.g., working with organizations such as IDEO). As a CAnD3 Fellow, Julia hopes to build pan-Canadian, interdisciplinary collaborations, expand to other population survey data sources, and learn about new statistical methods in population data science.

Julia's links: CAnD3 profile 触听 | 听触 |

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