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The Finnish research team found that people with less education are at greater risk of cardiovascular and other diseases

The Finnish research team found that people with less education are at greater risk of cardiovascular and other diseases

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The Finnish research team found that people with less education are at greater risk of cardiovascular and other diseases

As the population ages and life expectancy increases, the number of people suffering from dementia is increasing. To prevent dementia more effectively, it is important to better understand the risk and protective factors that influence cognition in later life.

Cardiovascular risk factors in middle age are known to be associated with weaker cognition in later life (memory and other information processing abilities).

A new study from the University of Helsinki and the University of Turku aims to examine whether educational background affects this association. More than 4,000 Finnish twins participated in the study, published in Age and Ageing.

The twin study design was able to examine the genetic and shared environmental impacts in these associations. A shared environment refers to all environmental factors that make children in the same family similar, such as socioeconomic background and living environment, such as eating and exercising habits.

This twin study showed that cardiovascular risk factors in less educated people had a stronger effect on cognitive deterioration in later life than in highly educated people.

Studies have shown that cardiovascular risk factors, such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, high body mass index, and physical inactivity, are associated with poorer cognitive performance in later life. This association is more pronounced among those with lower levels of education than those with higher levels of education.

Higher levels of education may increase cognitive reserves, which can help better tolerate dementia risk factors.

The findings do not mean that a healthy lifestyle is not important for the prevention of dementia, but rather highlight the importance of family effects in advocating for healthy lifestyles and the importance of education in the prevention of dementia.

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Time School has reported on a study in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health that the choice to continue further education or step into society at age 16 can affect cardiovascular status at age 46. People who spend more time studying at a young age have an average blood pressure of 128.9 mm Hg in middle age, and their blood lipid levels are healthier. Those with the highest blood pressure in this group also had lower cardiovascular risk than those who opted for manual labor at age 16.

More importantly, the result has nothing to do with middle-aged social status. To expand on the situation, as long as you leave the campus at the age of 16, even if you are gifted and self-employed, in middle age, fame and fortune double harvest BMW, blood pressure, blood lipids, waist circumference and other indicators will still be worse than those who continue to study.

The Finnish research team found that people with less education are at greater risk of cardiovascular and other diseases

—— TIMEPIE ——

If education is a choice, may you go on firmly

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