Voting Is Good for Your Health, Study Finds

Voting isn’t just good for the country. A new study reveals that adolescents and young adults who are civically involved also tend to have better health. In the new study, published Tuesday in the journal Child Development, researchers analyzed data from 9,471 adolescents and young adults between ages 11 and 20, who were surveyed in 1994-1995 and followed for nearly 15 years. They found that young people who engaged in any of three activities—volunteering, voting or activism—were more likely to have a higher income and education later in life than those who did not. People who volunteered and voted were also more likely to be in better health. People who reported volunteering and voting were more likely to eat in a healthy way and have fewer depressive symptoms than their peers who didn’t. But people who were involved in activism, despite also having higher incomes and education attainment later on, were also more likely to engage in risky behaviors like substance abuse. “Civic engagement is a productive experience for young people,” says study author Parissa Ballard, assistant professor of family and community medicine at Wake Forest School of Medicine. “The findings on volunteering and voting were uniformly positive.” The study is one of the first to look at the potential health benefits of voting. Other studies have linked volunteering to better health outcomes like fewer symptoms of depression, better self-reported health ...
Source: TIME: Health - Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Tags: Uncategorized activism adolescents civic engagement Depression depressive symptoms Education health health benefits of volunteering healthier healthytime income public health substance abuse volunteering health benefits Votin Source Type: news