What The Longevity Project Really Teaches Us About Divorce
The Longevity Study reinforces the importance of putting the best interests of your children first when divorcing.
The Longevity Study reinforces the importance of putting the best interests of your children first when divorcing.
Howard S. Friedman, Ph.D. | Posted 04.25.2012
One of us is a 100-year-old physician who has been in an ongoing research study since 1917, and the other is a baby-boomer health researcher who has been heavily involved in conducting that remarkable study.
Howard S. Friedman, Ph.D. | Posted 10.03.2011
The discoveries of The Longevity Project give us probabilities and cannot say with certainty how healthy a person will remain and how long any individual will live, but things are looking really good for President Obama.
Howard S. Friedman, Ph.D. | Posted 09.12.2011
On the "Today Show," Leslie pointed out that you cannot understand much about the causes of health and long life by studying only people who succeeded. They don't really know the answer.
Howard S. Friedman, Ph.D. | Posted 09.03.2011
The first four U.S. presidents -- Washington, Adams, Jefferson and Madison -- plus Benjamin Franklin -- lived an average of more than 82 years, and they did so without the benefit of modern medical care.
nytimes.com | KATHERINE BOUTON | Posted 06.19.2011
After reading “The Longevity Project,” I took an unscientific survey of friends and relatives asking them what personality characteristic they tho...
Katie Hafner | Posted 06.08.2011
In 1990, two psychologists embarked on a research project seeking answers to the question, "What makes for a long life?" Divorce, it turns out, plays a significant role in longevity, particularly for children of divorce.
Howard S. Friedman, Ph.D. | Posted 05.25.2011
Our findings confirmed that individuals who were religious, especially women, were more likely to live longer lives. But why?
Mandy Walker | Posted 05.12.2012