I really like the town where my family lives, and I sometimes joke that there’s only one way I could think of to improve it.
That would be to pick the whole thing up and move it about 30 miles to the southeast, so that we’d be on the beach.
While that’s really just my personal preference — and if you knew me in real life, you’d know it’s a pretty deeply felt one — it turns out there might be a significant benefit if we could ever pull it off.
Writing in the journal Environmental Research, researchers from the college of public health at The Ohio State University said they studied population data from 66,000 census tracts around the United States, and compared the life expectancy of people in each tract.
Bottom line: Live near the beach
Then, they correlated the data based on how far each tract was located from “blue space,” which is the term used in urban planning to refer to areas dominated by surface water bodies (lakes, oceans, bays, etc.) or watercourses (rivers, streams, etc.).
Here’s what they found:
People who lived in urban areas near inland bodies of water — things like lakes and rivers — actually had lower life expectancies than those who weren’t near water at all.
People who lived in rural areas near inland bodies of water had a life expectancy benefit over those who lived in urban areas.
But people who lived within 30 miles of an ocean or gulf — regardless of whether they lived in urban or rural environments — had longer life expectancies than those who didn’t.
“Overall, the coastal residents were expected to live a year or more longer than the 79-year average, and those who lived in more urban areas near inland rivers and lakes were likely to die by about 78 or so,” lead researcher Jianyong “Jamie” Wu was quoted as saying in a statement accompanying the research.
‘Coastal residents tend to have longer life expectancy’
Theories as to why people who live near the coast live longer include:
Milder temperatures and better air quality than those who live inland.
Better transportation options which is an advantage both in day-to-day living and in the ability to get medical attention quickly when needed.
Less susceptibility to drought, which, along with very high rainfall, is associated with worse health in previous studies.
Higher incomes. “Extensive research has consistently demonstrated the significant positive impact of higher income levels on life expectancy,” according to the study, “which effectively explains why coastal residents tend to have longer life expectancy.”
I acknowledge, of course, that the last cause — higher incomes — is a bit more problematic in terms of finding cause and effect; it’s likely that wealthy people are more likely to be able to afford to live near the coast than those who aren’t.
(I invite you to do a little bit of dream-searching on Zillow to see for yourself.)
“On the other side,” said Yanni Cao, a postdoctoral researcher who also worked on the study, “pollution, poverty, lack of safe opportunities to be physically active, and an increased risk of flooding are likely drivers of these differences.”
Guess where we went?
We should point out here that the health and life expectancy differences between living near an inland body of water and living on the beach, so to speak, were something the researchers hadn’t expected to find.
“We thought it was possible that any type of ‘blue space’ would offer some beneficial effects, and we were surprised to find such a significant and clear difference,” Wu said in the same statement accompanying the research.
Also, we’re talking about one year of life expectancy, which is significant for statistical purposes but maybe not enough to prompt a stampede toward the shore.
Still, I’m glad I found the study — and that maybe not coincidentally, that I'm sharing it with you just after coming back from summer vacation.
Three guesses where we went.
7 other things worth knowing
Joining forces from several other Republican-led states, the Louisiana and Mississippi National Guards will deploy troops to Washington as part of the Trump administration’s ongoing federal policing and immigration overhaul in the nation’s capital. “Crime is out of control there, and it’s clear something must be done to combat it,” said Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves. (AP)
Tuberculosis, the most deadly infectious disease in the world according to the WHO, is flourishing in immigration detention centers across the country. Detainees have tested positive for tuberculosis in Alaska, Arizona, California, and Washington State. One immigrant died days after a diagnosis of the disease in the Eloy Detention Center in Arizona, an ICE death notice shows. Detainees. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) did not respond to a request for comment. (American Prospect)
MSNBC is changing its name to My Source News Opinion World, or MS NOW for short, as part of its corporate divorce from NBC. The network, which appeals to liberal audiences with a stable of personalities including Rachel Maddow, Ari Melber and Nicole Wallace, has been building its own separate news division from NBC News. It will also remove NBC’s peacock symbol from its logo as part of the change, which will take effect later this year. (PBS)
Newsmax will pay Dominion Voting Systems $67 million to settle the defamation lawsuit brought against the right-leaning news outlet over its pushing of debunked claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. (Mediate)
As Russia held its Victory Day parade this year, hackers backing the Kremlin hijacked an orbiting satellite that provides television service to Ukraine. Instead of normal programing, Ukrainian viewers saw parade footage beamed in from Moscow: waves of tanks, soldiers and weaponry. The message illustrates how 21st-century war is waged not just on land, sea and air but also in cyberspace and the reaches of outer space. (AP)
Who is Kathleen Williams, the Miami judge who could shut down the so-called 'Alligator Alcatraz?' (Miami Herald)
A senior lawyer in Australia has apologized to a judge for filing submissions in a murder case that included fake quotes and nonexistent case judgments generated by artificial intelligence. Defense lawyer Rishi Nathwani, who holds the prestigious legal title of King’s Counsel, took “full responsibility” for filing incorrect information in submissions in the case of a teenager charged with murder. “We are deeply sorry and embarrassed for what occurred,” Nathwani told Justice James Elliott on Wednesday, on behalf of the defense team. (ABC News)
Thanks for reading. Photo by Amy Vosters on Unsplash. I wrote about some of this before at Inc.com. See you in the comments.
Not sure where you went but I’ll remind you that today my fellow North Carolinians out on the Outer Banks have had to evacuate because of that big blow that has been churning around the Atlantic the last couple or three days. While it’s not expected to land, the winds will again change the face of the barrier islands that really are special spots.
Three guesses?
1. The beach.
2. 30 miles Southeast.
3. Jersey shore to rub elbows with JoJo from Jerz.