Analysis also says not attending school is as deadly as smoking or heavy drinking

Every year spent in school or university improves our life expectancy, while not attending school is as deadly as smoking or heavy drinking, according to the first systematic study directly linking education to gains in longevity.

Using evidence from industrialised countries such as the UK and US as well as developing countries such as China and Brazil, the review found that an adult’s risk of mortality went down by 2% for every year in full-time education.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

The Guardian view on the Covid vaccine breakthrough: making it work | Editorial

At last, there is hope of an end to this pandemic. Scientists…

BlackRock holds $85bn in coal despite pledge to sell fossil fuel shares

Loophole means asset manager can hold shares in firms earning less than…

Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu’s comments show he is ‘not concerned’ about ceasefire deal, says Hamas official

Israel’s prime minister told US media that a deal to release hostages…

Derrick Lewis

UFC Fight Night, Curtis Blaydes, Yana Kunitskaya