Comments
Fantastic_Beans t1_jdpvsjv wrote
I work at a hospital. The amount of times an old man has answered the question "What medicines do you take?" With "I don't know, but my wife has a list." Makes my head spin. Sir, you are 60 years old and you can't keep track of a medicine list on your own?
carloandreaguilar t1_jdrlwsb wrote
Nice observation
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Wagamaga OP t1_jdnnp4v wrote
After six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers.
Among surviving wives, however, that rise in risk was just 27%.
Why the difference? Study author Alexandros Katsiferis said he could only offer a few theories.
"We do not have the data to accurately answer that question, so we cannot be very confident on the reasons why this phenomenon tends to happen," noted Katsiferis, a doctoral fellow with the section for epidemiology in the department of public health at the University of Copenhagen.
But he pointed out that elderly widows may be better than widowers at "absorbing the shock, [including] the hurdles of taking care of a sick husband, along with all the needs and quirks" leading up to the husband's passing.
By contrast, it could be that the "physical and emotional health [of men] relies on the willingness of their spouse to take care of them," he added. "So, when their wife is out of their life, you get this collapse."
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-03-spouse-lethal-men.html
Narcan9 t1_jdp35gg wrote
I think older women are better at maintaining social relationships. They have things like weekly coffee groups. If the husband dies they have a better social network to rely on.
YesterdaySimilar2069 t1_jdp441g wrote
Im curious about how these studies will look in another 20-50 years with the blurring of gender roles and improvement in men's support structures. It'll be especially interesting to compare the data of same sex couples. I think the reasons for this are quite complex with regards to women's support structures and them coming from a generation where the woman is expected to take on the lions share of domestic labor, which is the bulk of labor performed after people enter the retirement years. I find that a lot of old men don't appear to have hobbies or volunteer gigs, which are huge life extenders. Yay social sciences. So much theory, no way to prove it. Haha
stu54 t1_jdpab7h wrote
I was thinking the same. Older men's social lives were largely composed of work and wife. After retirement, empty nest, and widowering an old man is left with nothing.
Fantastic_Beans t1_jdpvnsi wrote
Game night with the gents at the retirement home
Prryapus t1_jdqg17c wrote
We're lucky to live in a generation where we're so used to tech. By the time we're this old we'll be able to have system link halo battles like back in the good old days
hananobira t1_jdrp8pp wrote
I’m holding out for the nursing home with the holodeck.
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stonedsour t1_jdqzz3f wrote
I believe it. My dad owned a store for many years and was social in that he was friendly to the customers and would say hi to them while out in town. He literally has no hobbies or friends and his life consisted of just going to work, running errands, watching tv and eating dinner, going to sleep, rinse and repeat. Now his store is closed and he still doesn’t have any interest in hobbies and he doesn’t have any close friends. It’s like he doesn’t know how to do those things and it’s pretty sad but he refuses to change
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CivilProfit t1_jdq0a95 wrote
Is it really shocking that the generations of men who Abused Women the most as a support system who literally can't survive when the woman that they were abusing as a support system dies?
krum t1_jdpiy6y wrote
danish men can't cook, so they starve
dracuella t1_jdqc3op wrote
I was about to make the same comment (source: Danish woman).
I was sure my dad could cook until he and my mum (finally) split up and went their separate ways. She remarried, he remained single. Most of his diet would consist of Danish ryebread with spread, which isn't necessarily bad but it definitely doesn't cover minerals, vitamins and such. He does cook on and off but let's face it, mostly he can't be arsed.
I'm thinking most of his generation (70+) are the same.
AdEnvironmental4437 t1_jdqh1ri wrote
Idk I'm a Danish and my dad probably does most of the cooking in our house, often alone and i think he's a great cook. We're both being anecdotal tho so whatevs.
[deleted] t1_jdt4f44 wrote
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clhb t1_jdpvit1 wrote
Err how true is this.
[deleted] t1_jdqnxyi wrote
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[deleted] t1_jdqpolt wrote
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Snezzy_9245 t1_jdragkd wrote
All one needs is rødgrød med fløde på. How hard can that be?
tiletap t1_jdrvvh9 wrote
Anecdotally, after my grandmother died in 1983 my grandfather continued for another 25 years, due in large part, I think, to his regular meetups with friends and continuing to swim just about every day.
curtyshoo t1_jdqjbo2 wrote
At any rate, it's a good reason to keep the old bat around.
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redditknees t1_jdovuki wrote
How many of those men were capable of cooking for themselves?
NefariousnessNo484 t1_jdpbhm0 wrote
This is the real answer. Or even if they cook, choosing to make the gd unhealthiest stuff.
rydan t1_jdq5b1a wrote
Boomers have most of the wealth in the world. If he can't cook he can hire one from his pension.
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styder_hiru t1_jdqd1zo wrote
Never get married, never die. Understood!!!
TacosEveryCorner t1_jdpm4j2 wrote
Many stop taking medications
elfootman t1_jdqsjr5 wrote
How do you know?
sideeyeingcat t1_jdqwg9a wrote
Because he is obviously a 60 year old who died after his wife passed away, elfootman.
elictronic t1_jdseweo wrote
Have Relatives? Are you looking for a longitudinal study on men not doing what they are told by their doctor?
allstevenz t1_jdomjbn wrote
Sounds a bit like Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (broken-heart syndrome)
MNAK_ t1_jdowrja wrote
Seems more likely the men just spiral into unhealthy habits without someone to cook, clean, and take care of them.
dracuella t1_jdqct09 wrote
A UK friend of mine told me they had to move his granddad into a home because he lived on cold, baked beans on toast and was basically malnourished. That's not a pleasant conversation to have with a beloved relative.
sharkysharkie t1_jdqiod2 wrote
>Seems more likely the men just spiral into unhealthy habits without someone to cook, clean, and take care of them.
It is very wrong to assume the only reason why these husbands die shortly after is because they lost their ‘servants’. In fact I laughed. Loneliness and social isolation is a terribly strong factor for diseases.
carloandreaguilar t1_jdrmfe4 wrote
But I don’t know if unhealthy habits make you die within a year. Stress and a heart attack might
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Objective-Mechanic89 t1_jdr9vqq wrote
What a heartless thing to say of someone who loses their spouse in old age. I hope my future grandkids have more empathy.
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pound-town t1_jdp93rr wrote
That’s an acute thing that will get you hospitalized. This is more likely the emotional and household toll it takes as well as whatever the wife was making their stubborn husbands do.
Zincster t1_jdq8wbi wrote
This study also measured an acute thing with the increased mortality inside one year.
flaminate_strutching t1_jdpbyg6 wrote
It really doesn’t, though.
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OhtareEldarian t1_jds05jq wrote
There is not a woman alive that’s shocked by this.
Heterophylla t1_jdpebsb wrote
So if you make it past one year you are probably good? Also, what are the absolute numbers? I can't find them in the paper. I hate relative risk in headlines.
Fantastic_Beans t1_jdpw30j wrote
I'll give you a cheat sheet in case your wife dies and leaves 65-69 year old you alone:
Know how to cook
Know how to keep a house clean and orderly
Know how to do laundry
Know how/when to make doctor's appointments
And take your goddamn medicine!
Honestly, I'm pretty sure it's the whole "men refuse to see a doctor unless their wives force them to" thing that does them in. Why are y'all like this?
silver-fusion t1_jdq2grs wrote
/> Live long and happy life
/> Work for 99% of my adult life
/> Spend life with soulmate
/> Finally retire
/> Body has been falling apart for years. Everything aches.
/> Soulmate permanently and irrecoverably exits life
/> Don't really feel like prolonging the suffering or getting dementia
/> Let's nature take its natural course
/> Get criticised by a misandrist with no life experience online
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Blunderhorse t1_jdr511n wrote
Not sure what the Danes’ excuse is, but the answer should be pretty obvious in the US. If it’s not worth the risk of losing your house to debt, it’ll probably get better on its own.
Childofglass t1_jdrldvu wrote
Don’t forget pay bills!
rydan t1_jdq5dp6 wrote
Or, and just hear me out here, find another wife. It shouldn't even be difficult as the number of men between 65-69 is far less than the number of women of the same age group.
Fantastic_Beans t1_jdq949f wrote
Funny enough, this happens a lot more than you think. Apparently, the elders at the retirement villages act like they're on Gray's Anatomy or something. I've heard stories
JeffreyDawmer t1_jdqnmhe wrote
What happens if you look at single males in this age group vs widowed males?
Fred2620 t1_jdr8j7s wrote
Single males show no difference in mortality in the months following the death of their nonexistent wife.
JeffreyDawmer t1_jdrp7ng wrote
That's not what I'm asking. If you treat single men as a control group, it could shed more light on what the root causes are. Funny though
Objective-Mechanic89 t1_jdr9lnb wrote
Wow what a question! When a single man's wife dies, he actually lives to infinity on average. That's the real LPT
JeffreyDawmer t1_jdrp1gg wrote
What? I'm wondering if the grief of losing a loved one is all that's at play here, or if it's the loss of social contact and what the effect of each could be. No need to get snarky because you didn't understand the question, it just makes you look bad.
Objective-Mechanic89 t1_jdrxicj wrote
The data set is about people dying after their SPOUSE. Single people don't die after their spouse because they didn't have one. I didn't understand the question because it doesn't make much sense.
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Artelj t1_jds8ngf wrote
I read in another comment here, Single men die earlier than married men, but single woman live longer than married woman.
JeffreyDawmer t1_jdsnyw2 wrote
Interesting. I would've guessed as much but the single women living longer than their married counterparts is definitely a surprise.
[deleted] t1_jdrnyn2 wrote
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XvoyagezX t1_jdpjt2t wrote
wouldnt that just be because of lonleiness?
Droomkar t1_jdqk559 wrote
Just dont get married, then you avoid trauma ez clap
shereturnedthering t1_jdstyvx wrote
Okay so my grandma (dad’s side) passed away, and then my grandpa who was healthier and stronger died within the same year. On my mom’s side however, my grandpa passed away after struggling with illness and my grandma is still going strong 7 years later.
On another note, I remember an interview where women and men were asked to choose if they’d rather die or their spouses, and all men answered they’d rather die first, but all the women said they’d rather live on and their husbands die instead.
Hmmmmm
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Dontsleeponlilyachty t1_jdrivmt wrote
I wonder how this compares to the population diagnosed with dementia? My grandfather died in 2021 my grandmother is still tootin' along, but she has had dementia for nearly 5 years; and constantly forgets her husband passed away.
singularineet t1_jds6228 wrote
It's really really hard to control for confounds in studies like this. Some latent variable can decrease both life expectancies, husband and wife. E.g., black mold in the house, or poor eating habits, poor exercise, even common genetic factors if people tend to marry others who are genetically similar. Carbon monoxide issues from the heating system or in the car. Similar attitudes toward risky behaviour. Common sources of stress. Similar sleep habits. You can spitball this stuff all day, but unless you do a controlled study (which would seem unethical in this case) you're still going to have a lot of doubt about causality.
[deleted] t1_je3eqer wrote
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JetBlackBoogie t1_jedn0fm wrote
The amount of people who read an article like this and immediately see it as an opportunity for gender point scoring is disgusting.
Imagine you were being so dismissive of your own Father, Brother, or Son.
The point of research like this, at least in part, is to help people. Poking fun at dying elderly men is not helping to resolve anything.
[deleted] t1_jdool1u wrote
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Hot-Control-7466 t1_jdqs5ye wrote
So much man bashing. Men can’t cook. They won’t take their meds. Did you notice women had a 27% elevated risk, too?
The researchers said they couldn’t explain it but that won’t stop Reddit.
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CanuckInTheMills t1_jdrfn4n wrote
Two people eating the same foodstuffs for 30+ years are bound to have the same health outcomes. To me that’s just common sense.
fwubglubbel t1_jdpxp06 wrote
And not a single mention of the causes of these deaths. What a pointless article.
AdEnvironmental4437 t1_jdqhh2c wrote
Data without discernible cause is still useful?
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Internetolocutor t1_jdpjuwd wrote
Kill her when you're 64?
Fufrasking t1_jdpvz7n wrote
Yeah cuz he no longer has a live-in life coach monitoring his every drink, every smoke, every late night. Nothing to stop from staying up until dawn thanks to lines of good coke snorted off a $200/hr stripper's belly. Pizza at 4am. Driving fast. A recipe for disaster. After an appropriate mourning period of course.
deck4242 t1_jdpqubt wrote
Thing is usually men die first anyway. Ots quite rare than husband oulive his wife.
CorgiSplooting t1_jdpkno0 wrote
Hookers and blow? I mean if I’m 69 and single that’s a great way to go…
Narcan9 t1_jdp2rj9 wrote
Proof that women can haunt a man even from the grave.
washu_z t1_jdp5mmx wrote
It’s got to be at least partly because their wives were the ones making them take their medications, go to the doctor, checking up on them etc.