How handsome or pretty you are, can hold surprising clues to your health, from your risk for heart attacks, diabetes and depression to your tolerance for pain, new studies have shown.
According to the research, attractive people are less likely to get asthma, diabetes, and high blood pressure.
The research, which was published in the journal Evolution And Human Behaviour, say that attractiveness may be a marker of good genes, which also signal good health, as well as increasing the likelihood of having healthy offspring.
The more physically attractive men and women are rated, the more unlikely they are to suffer from a wide range of health problems, from high cholesterol to depression.
In their lifetime, they are diagnosed with fewer physical and mental health conditions.
They also feel healthier, have less time off work and are during their lifetime.
The study carried out by U.S. researchers from the University of Cincinnati and other centres, is said to be the biggest study yet to find links between attractiveness and good health, and the first to home in on a number of individual diseases.
It was based on study of 15,000 men and women aged 24 to 35 who have been followed since they were ten.
The study involved face-to-face interviews and questionnaires, as well as an analysis of health data.
The men and women were put into five categories — very unattractive, unattractive, about average, attractive or very attractive and were quizzed about whether they had been diagnosed with various conditions or suffered symptoms of them.
There were direct links between attractiveness and a number of health conditions, and the more attractive the person was rated, the lower the risk of ill-health.
For each increase in the rating of physical attractiveness for men, there was a 13 per cent reduction in the likelihood of a diagnosis for high cholesterol, a 20 per cent drop in the risk of high blood pressure, a 15 per cent reduction in the probability of being diagnosed with depression, a 23 per cent decrease in the likelihood of an ADHD diagnosis, and a 21 per cent lower likelihood of stuttering.
Women who were rated as more attractive were 21 per cent less likely to be diagnosed with high blood pressure, 22 per cent less likely to have diabetes, 12 per cent less likely to be asthmatic, 17 per cent less likely to suffer from depression, 18 per cent less likely to receive an ADHD diagnosis, 18 per cent less likely to stutter and 13 per cent less likely to have tinnitus.
Both the men and women who were rated as very physically attractive were also more positive about their own health and had fewer days off work due to illness.
They also had a reduced number of chronic disease diagnoses, of psychological disorders and of disease diagnoses overall.
The researchers suggest their findings support the theory that attractiveness is a marker of healthy genes.
According to the research, attractive people are less likely to get asthma, diabetes, and high blood pressure.
The research, which was published in the journal Evolution And Human Behaviour, say that attractiveness may be a marker of good genes, which also signal good health, as well as increasing the likelihood of having healthy offspring.
The more physically attractive men and women are rated, the more unlikely they are to suffer from a wide range of health problems, from high cholesterol to depression.
In their lifetime, they are diagnosed with fewer physical and mental health conditions.
They also feel healthier, have less time off work and are during their lifetime.
The study carried out by U.S. researchers from the University of Cincinnati and other centres, is said to be the biggest study yet to find links between attractiveness and good health, and the first to home in on a number of individual diseases.
It was based on study of 15,000 men and women aged 24 to 35 who have been followed since they were ten.
The study involved face-to-face interviews and questionnaires, as well as an analysis of health data.
The men and women were put into five categories — very unattractive, unattractive, about average, attractive or very attractive and were quizzed about whether they had been diagnosed with various conditions or suffered symptoms of them.
There were direct links between attractiveness and a number of health conditions, and the more attractive the person was rated, the lower the risk of ill-health.
For each increase in the rating of physical attractiveness for men, there was a 13 per cent reduction in the likelihood of a diagnosis for high cholesterol, a 20 per cent drop in the risk of high blood pressure, a 15 per cent reduction in the probability of being diagnosed with depression, a 23 per cent decrease in the likelihood of an ADHD diagnosis, and a 21 per cent lower likelihood of stuttering.
Women who were rated as more attractive were 21 per cent less likely to be diagnosed with high blood pressure, 22 per cent less likely to have diabetes, 12 per cent less likely to be asthmatic, 17 per cent less likely to suffer from depression, 18 per cent less likely to receive an ADHD diagnosis, 18 per cent less likely to stutter and 13 per cent less likely to have tinnitus.
Both the men and women who were rated as very physically attractive were also more positive about their own health and had fewer days off work due to illness.
They also had a reduced number of chronic disease diagnoses, of psychological disorders and of disease diagnoses overall.
The researchers suggest their findings support the theory that attractiveness is a marker of healthy genes.
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