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VOA常速英语:Daughters Keep Mothers Healthy - Even When They're Not Nearby
2008-11-05来源:和谐英语
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For years, public health researchers have noted that married people live longer, healthier lives. As Rose Hoban reports, one researcher went a step further and examined the impact of children on their parents' health.
Public health researchers have found the so-called "marriage benefit" is stronger for men than it is for women.
Dr. Omar Rahman from the Independent University of Bangladesh explains that women whose husbands die manage to continue their lives, but elderly men who lose their wives quickly lose their health.
"Men suffer from being widowed or divorced because they lose their social network," Rahman says. "Because it's the women who maintain the social network, and once [men] lose their spouses through divorce or through widowhood, they basically fall apart because they can't cook, they can't clean, they can't keep up with their friends… and they have high mortality."
Rahman says this marriage benefit can even be seen in a country such as his, where men control the money in a household.
But he began to wonder if having children influenced the health and mortality for a surviving spouse.
Rahman examined a large study - called the Matlab Health and Socioeconomic Survey - of about 800 households in several Bangladeshi villages. The information included data on wealth, family structure and health. His hypothesis was that in a male-centered society, the presence of sons would be more important to the health of elderly parents.
"In old age, what do you need?" Rahman asks.
He argues that most older people need some money, and they need someone to look after them.
"Now, in that society, the men control the money until they die," Rahman says. "So they don't need anyone to give them money. They don't need their sons to give them money because they control the land, and they, on average, they're 10 years older than their wives, so their wives are all alive… so they have wives that take care of them."
And indeed, what Rahman found was that for elderly men, the presence of children didn't influence their health or mortality once they became old.
But Rahman found that what kept elderly women healthy was having a daughter. It didn't matter if the daughter lived far away, and it didn't matter if there was also a son. In terms of keeping mothers healthy in old age, simply having a daughter guaranteed better health.
"And what was even more surprising, probably the most surprising thing in our study, was educated daughters seem to matter a lot," he says.
"An older woman, like 60 plus woman, who had a daughter who had at least six years of schooling was three times as likely to say that she was in good health compared to her peer who didn't have a daughter at that level of education," Rahman reports.
He says this strengthens the argument for educating girls. He also says this finding could explain Bangladesh's birth rate. After a precipitous drop in the number of children per household, the birth rate has remained steady at three per family. He suggests this could be because families frequently try for a third child if they don't have a son and daughter already.
He also says he's quite happy to have two daughters of his own.
Rahman presented his study in October at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association in San Diego, California.
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