In March 1946, scientists recorded the birth of almost every British baby born in one, cold week. They have been following thousands of them ever since, in what has become the longest running major study of human development in the world. These people – who turn 70 over the next two weeks − are some of the best studied people on the planet. And the analysis of them was so successful that researchers repeated the exercise, starting to follow thousands of babies born in 1958, 1970, the early 1990s and at the turn of the millennium. Altogether, more than 70,000 people across five generations have been enrolled in these “birth cohort” studies. No other country in the world is tracking generations of people in quite this way: the studies have become the envy of scientists around the world, a jewel in the crown of British science, […]
Sunday, February 28th, 2016
The Life Project: what makes some people happy, healthy and successful – and others not?
Author: Helen Pearson
Source: The Guardian (U.K.)
Publication Date: Saturday 27 February 2016 03.59 EST
Link: The Life Project: what makes some people happy, healthy and successful – and others not?
Source: The Guardian (U.K.)
Publication Date: Saturday 27 February 2016 03.59 EST
Link: The Life Project: what makes some people happy, healthy and successful – and others not?
Stephan: These unique British large cohort longitudinal studies tell the story of what changes in the culture have done to people's health; why inequity produces such negative consequences; how food choices create obesity. And the takeaway: This enormous and unparalleled body of research makes it clear that wellness oriented policies produce better individual and social outcomes.