|
|||
Further reading:
|
When
I say “heart attack” what are your first thoughts in terms of causes? A good
bet is that you will consider cholesterol levels, and immediately after that,
diet. After a bit more thought, you might want to add stress induced by a job
with too much pressure and responsibility, and finally—just maybe—you will
consider the possibility of a genetic predisposition. These are all the causes
we hear from the media are associated with heart disease, and indubitably there
is a lot of research to back these claims up. However,
and most astoundingly, research available since the 1960s and repeated several
times since, also shows that all the above factors are actually minor
causes of heart disease. The best single predictor of heart problems is indeed
stress, but of an entirely different and still widely ignored type: the stress
that comes not from doing too much or being under self-imposed pressure, but
from being ordered around with little or no control over your destiny. A
study conducted among 17,000 British civil servants (and before that on a
million employees of Bell Telephones in the 1960s) clearly shows that the status
of a person’s job is the most reliable predictor of heart attack, more than
obesity, smoking or high blood pressure (though these count as well, so don’t
rush to get that triple cheeseburger just yet). High cholesterol is also a risk
factor, but only in people that are genetically predisposed to it. It seems that
your heart is by and large at the mercy of the size of your pay check. The
studies linking the pecking order on the job with heart problems found that what
happens is that being ordered around diminishes your sense of control over your
life, which causes stress mediated by the release of the hormone cortisol. High
levels of cortisol not only create problems for your coronary arteries, but
depress your immune response, so that you are also more likely to fall prey to
an infection—which is not helped by the fact that the rise in cortisol is
accompanied by a decrease in serotonin, meaning that you don’t sleep very well
and you never feel rested. Privatization
can do that to you too. A follow up study on British civil servants explored how
they were coping with the new 1990s concept of no job security. Suddenly, these
people could loose their jobs for reasons that had nothing to do with their
performance and all to do with the capricious oscillations of the market
economy. Predictably, the employees in question felt no control over their
source of livelihood, which caused stress and eventually illness—all of which
had little to do with diet, drinking and smoking. Researchers
have been able to explode another myth related to heart attacks: the idea that
it is a disease of the rich, suffered by CEOs because of the high pressure they
experience on their job for prolonged periods of time and the associated
responsibilities of such a situation. Well, if you are a CEO and are planning on
using that as an excuse to raise your bonus this year, forget it. While there
are exceptions, the heart attack rate in this category is actually much lower
than the population at large, presumably because these people are actually very
much in control of what they are doing, since they are everybody else’s boss
(and even when they “fail” they get to retire with a few extra million
dollars in their bank accounts). This category becomes at risk—rather
ironically—only after retirement, possibly because their new
“relaxed” life style is actually associated with very little control. Taking
it easy for someone used to issue orders and be in charge can be fatal,
literally. Human
beings are primates, and evolutionary theory teaches us to expect something
similar in our inter-specific cousins. Sure enough, studies on baboons have
shown an increase in stress level and production of cortisol in males that join
a new troop, because when they do so they find themselves at the bottom of the
pecking order, with little control over availability of food and mates. The same
is true for monkeys studied in zoos, where researchers found a nice inverse
relationship between pecking order and the furring up of arties. Next time you
see a monkey or ape, remember to empathize with their working conditions. Amazingly,
you can even demonstrate the effect experimentally on humans by diving people
into two groups, giving them the same tasks, but ordering around one group and
empowering the other with self decision making. The latter group experiences
lower levels of stress hormones, blood pressure and heart rate. What
are we to learn from all this? For one thing it is interesting that we are
experiencing a continuous pressure in modern society to “take
responsibility,” follow a healthy life style, control our diet, watch closely
what sorts of habits and addictions we develop, or else. While this is all good
advice in general, why don’t we ever hear that the single most important
factor affecting our health is the lack of control over our lives that modern
society forces upon us? I am no neo-luddite (see my August 2001 column), but
shouldn’t we question the social order at the least to the extent that it
makes us unhappy and possibly kills us? I
am not of course suggesting that we are experiencing a “great media
conspiracy” to blame us instead of the system. The danger is a lot more subtle
than that since the facts are out there for anybody to check, if they only
bother to. What started me on this was reading a summary of what I have
discussed in the widely available volume by Matt Ridley, Genome. Then
again, no newspapers, TV news, or talk show picks up on this sort of
information, disseminates it to the public, and raises awareness. The reason is
probably that questioning the system and lifting the blame from the individual
goes directly against an entrenched aspect of the American psyche, it challenges
the basic assumption of individualism and “opportunity” for everybody that
this country is all about. Well, at least once in your life it is healthy to
question even the most fundamental assumptions. Go for it, it might hurt less
than you think. Next Month: "Beer and circus in American education -
Pars destruens"
|
||
Web links:Health
Central, to learn more about your health and fitness, though mostly
from the standard viewpoint of “society ain’t to blame.” American
Heart Association’s “Heart
and Stroke A-Z Guide.” The
Job Stress Help page: who
knows, you might find something useful here… |
|||
Visit Massimo's Skeptic & Humanist Web |
|||
![]() Massimo's Tales of the Rational: Essays About Nature and Science |
|||