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A Grateful Heart May Be a Healthy Heart: MedlinePlus

A Grateful Heart May Be a Healthy Heart: MedlinePlus

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From the National Institutes of HealthNational Institutes of Health






A Grateful Heart May Be a Healthy Heart

Keeping a gratitude journal seems to reduce cardiac risk factors, study finds
By Robert Preidt
Monday, April 13, 2015
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MONDAY, April 13, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- Being thankful for the good things in life may benefit heart failure patients, a new study suggests.
The research included almost 200 heart failure patients who didn't yet have any symptoms, such as shortness of breath or fatigue. Halting the disease progression at this point -- known as stage B -- can prevent it from moving to stage C. In stage C, patients have a five times higher risk for death, according to the researchers.
Patients completed standard psychological tests so researchers could assess the patients' levels of gratitude and spiritual well-being.
Higher levels of gratitude were associated with better mood, better sleep, less fatigue and less inflammation, a factor that can worsen heart failure, according to the study.
However, it's important to note that this study was only able to find an association between feeling grateful and improved heart health markers; it wasn't designed to prove that feeling thankful actually caused the improvements.
The study was published recently in the journal Spirituality in Clinical Practice.
To get a better idea of how feeling thankful might help the heart, the researchers asked some of the patients to keep a gratitude journal for eight weeks. On most days, they were expected to write down three things for which they were most thankful.
And, keeping a gratitude journal seemed to help heart health even more, the study showed.
"We found that those patients who kept gratitude journals for those eight weeks showed reductions in circulating levels of several important inflammatory biomarkers, as well as an increase in heart rate variability while they wrote. Improved heart rate variability is considered a measure of reduced cardiac risk," study author Paul Mills, a professor of family medicine and public health at the University of California, San Diego, said in a journal news release.
"It seems that a more grateful heart is indeed a more healthy heart, and that gratitude journaling is an easy way to support cardiac health," he concluded.
SOURCE: Spirituality in Clinical Practice, news release, April 9, 2015
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