Ran across this yesterday: Having A Larger Family Lowers The Odds Of Developing Cancer
The research team says that larger families especially see lower rates of bladder, brain, breast, cervical, colorectal, lung, ovarian, and stomach cancers, as well as melanoma. In fact, the data showed the effect was stronger when total household size was taken into account. That is, the number of inhabitants of a single home is linked to cancer risk, even if that number includes extended family.
The effect was particularly notable in males more than females, which surprised the authors as previous research showed that a woman’s cancer risk drops with every pregnancy.
As for why having more children can make families healthier, the researchers suggest that larger families may enjoy a stronger emotional bond and an even more loving, positive environment which helps to ward off diseases. Additionally, family members tend to push each other to take better care of themselves, and often keep a look out for one another when it comes to health.
Neat find!Ran across this yesterday: Having A Larger Family Lowers The Odds Of Developing Cancer
Whereas I agree 100% with your succeeding paragraph, don’t be too quick to throw this out.And those reasons, "stronger emotional bond and an even more loving, positive environment " are female centric ones ones the women in the house would be getting greater benefit from. So that doesn't fit the results.
No, but I got experience. I've lived longer since I took a second wife. Never been this old before.Anyone have any literature on this?
Whereas I agree 100% with your succeeding paragraph, don’t be too quick to throw this out.
While they may be female centric, who is to say that a man operating in the environment that YHWH designed for him doesn’t partake of benefits not available to men with a more self centered lifestyle?
While this doesn't surprise me there is SOME self selection here; healthy people are more likely to find a mate. Healthy people are more likely to have children. People with responsibilities and purpose are more likely to avoid risk behaviors or experience "deaths of despair." It's a virtuous cycle. The people who are more likely to live longer tend to be able to have families and families make you want to live longer.