Poll

YouTube.com/KU

Fibromyalgia & sleep

Fibromyalgia leaves its sufferers with chronic pain that can make it hard to get a good nights sleep. Nancy Hamilton, associate professor of psychology, is working to find out if the malady is in fact a sleep disorder that leads to pain. Watch video »


Being on the Hill, proudly watching her students culminate their academic careers is nothing new to Mary Klayder. This year, she’ll be there again. Only this time, she’s going to be one of them. Read the full story »

Research Matters Podcast


Happiness and Health

Does happiness equal health? A sweeping new investigation suggests that it does.



2 minutes (2.5 MB) | Download mp3 | Tell me more | Read transcript

Happiness = Health

A KU researcher has spearheaded a new investigation into the link between emotions and health. The research proves that positive emotions are critical for upkeep of physical health for people worldwide, above all for those who are deeply impoverished.

Tell me more.

Transcript

Does happiness equal health? A sweeping new investigation suggests that it does. From the University of Kansas, this is Research Matters. I’m Brendan Lynch.

Researcher Sarah Pressman, the Beatrice Wright assistant professor of psychology at KU and a Gallup research associate, has mined data from an ambitious worldwide survey from Gallup. Pressman found that positive emotions hold sway over health in all parts of the world – and in some parts more than others.

Pressman: “By working with Gallup, we were able to look at their world poll data. And what that does is it looks at about 95 percent of the planet by sampling 140 countries, with about one thousand people per country, and asks them questions about things – such as their subjective well being; whether or not they have a disease; whether or not the experience pain -- and we were able to look across all theses 140 countries to see if the relationships between emotions and health are consistent around the world.”

While the link between a positive outlook and good health already has been proven in the industrialized world, Pressman’s research made the breakthrough discovery that the link is strongest among impoverished people, where little research has been carried out before.

Pressman: “The relationship between emotion and health was actually stronger in places that were doing worse. So in countries where they’re only living into their Forties, places where they consistently go hungry, don’t have shelter. In those places, positive emotion was actually more strongly connected to health. So there seems that there is something really key about emotions that seems to becomes even more important in the worst-off areas around the world.”

Why does the KU researcher believe that emotions play a bigger role in health among the world’s poorest people? Pressman says it all comes down to medical access.

Pressman: “Medicine really protects us in a lot ways, and maybe even down the relationship between emotion and health in first-nation countries. Because even if you’re the most hostile, depressed person, you have medicine to help you. So you can go on statins and blood-pressure-lowering drugs and that kind of thing. But in a Third World country, you can’t do that. So in that case when emotion affects your physiology and builds up over time you don’t have anything to stop that from having an impact on your health.”

For more on the happiness health link, log onto Research Matters dot K-U dot E-D-U. For the University of Kansas, I’m Brendan Lynch.


Campus News

The Hemenway era

Celebrate Chancellor Bob Hemenway's 14 years of leadership at KU with a look back at his accomplishments. In addition, watch video tributes and browse photos of Hemenway's years at KU. Watch video tributes & recap Hemenway's legacy
KU Alerts

Swine flu alerts & updates

Get the latest KU updates regarding the campus community's response to the virus. More information

Spring on the Hill

KU's main campus, long considered one of the most beautiful in the nation, occupies 1,000 acres on and around Mount Oread in Lawrence. In this slide show, trees, plants and flowers blossom to create colorful accents along Jayhawk Boulevard. More photos of campus in bloom

KU acts to curb student alcohol abuse

KU will implement a parental notification program for alcohol and drug violations by students under 21 years of age, as well as several other initiatives aimed at educating students about the dangers of abusing alcohol and drugs. More information