Health

Staring at boobs may give a boost to male lifespans- Andrea Downey.

It is the secret we are all trying to unlock – how to live long and happy lives.
Science has found the key success, well, for men anyway.

In the United Kingdom, men in general are not expected to live as long as women – so maybe they need a little bit more help.
The average life expectancy for a man is 79, compared to women who are expected to live until 82 years old.

The most common age of death for men in the UK between 2012 and 2014 was 86, but women were living until 89 during the same time period, according to the Office of National Statistics.
The reason for women outliving men is down to genetics, according to Medical Daily.
Women have two X chromosomes, which provides them with a back-up if a mutation occurs.

However, men do not have that luxury – they only have one X chromosome to express all their genes.
Lifestyle factors can also impact how long a person will live.
Here are six ways a man can boost his life expectancy.

  1. Stare at boobs
    It may seem like an inconvenience, or an invasion of privacy, to many women but staring at boobs creates a positive mindset in men.
    The same effect occurs when they look at cute animals.


2012 study, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, looked at the effects positive thinking had on men’s health.
After a year, positive thinking had a powerful effect on health choices.

More than half of the patients with coronary artery disease increased their physical activity versus 37 percent in the control group, who were not asked to write down positive thoughts in the morning.

The same happened in men with high blood pressure.
More than 40 percent of those with high blood pressure followed their medication plan compared to 36 percent in the non-positive thinking group.

  1. Have lots of sex
    What every man wants to hear, but there is a good reason for it.
    A study in the BMJ found sex could decrease a man’s mortality rate by as much as 50 percent.
    It is all down to sex promoting physical well-being, as well as being a stress reliever – which can help reduce the likeliness of illness.
    Not to mention sex releases serotonin, the happy hormone, which makes us feel better overall.
    In the study, life expectancy increased by three to eight years in the group who reported more orgasms.
  2. Get married
    Not something everyone would have thought – especially those who refer to their wife as their “ball and chain”, but married men do live longer.
    But it also depends on the age they get married.
    A survey or more than 127,000 Americans found men who got married after they were 25 were likely to live longer than those who married young.
    Researchers have questioned whether healthy men are more likely to marry than men with health problems, but unhealthy men actually marry earlier, are less likely to divorce, and more likely to remarry after divorce or being widowed than healthy men.
    Others have wondered whether living with another person has health benefits.
    But it seems to be both.
  3. Have kids
    It seems like a natural progression, really.

Men who marry and have kids live longer than those who don’t.
A study in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health found that when parents reached age 60, the difference in life expectancy was two years for men and 1.5 years for women.
By the age of 80, men with kids were expected to live eight months longer than those without kids.
Researchers pondered whether those without kids lived an unhealthier lifestyle than those with kids.

  1. Be responsible
    A sense of responsibility can do wonders.
    A study in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology discovered older people in nursing homes who were given a plant to care for had improved socialisation, alertness and general function.
    Perhaps that is why having kids is good for you.
    Other groups in the nursing home received plants their nurses cared for, but 18 months later half as many residents who cared for the plant themselves had died.
  2. Get a “dad bod”
    Most men gain a bit of weight after they have kids, but that is not necessarily a bad thing.
    A book, called “How Men Age,” argues tubby men are less likely to suffer a heart attack or prostate cancer and are more likely to invest their time in their children.
    Auhtor Richard G. Bribiescas says their increased fat levels also makes them more attractive to women – which will help with the above tips.
Health

Shedding weight restores sperm quality in men Chukwuma Muanya.

A widening waistline may make for shrinking numbers of sperm, new research suggests.

Indian scientists studied more than 1,200 men and found that too much extra weight was linked to a lower volume of semen, a lower sperm count and lower sperm concentration. In addition, sperm motility (the ability to move quickly through the female reproductive tract) was poor. The sperm had other defects as well, the researchers added. Poor sperm quality can lower fertility and the chances of conception.

The report was published online September 19 in the journal Andrologia.

“It’s known that obese women take longer to conceive,” said lead researcher Dr. Gottumukkala Achyuta Rama Raju, from the Center for Assisted Reproduction at the Krishna IVF Clinic, in Visakhapatnam. “This study proves that obese men are also a cause for delay in conception,” he added.

“Parental obesity at conception has deleterious effects on embryo health, implantation, pregnancy and birth rates,” Rama Raju explained.

How obesity affects sperm quality isn’t known, he pointed out. But in continuing research, the study team is looking to see if losing weight will improve the quality of sperm.

Although that study is still in progress, early signs look good that sperm quality improves as men lose weight, Rama Raju said. For the study, Rama Raju and his colleagues used computer-aided sperm analysis to assess the sperm of 1,285 men. Obese men, they found, had fewer sperm, a lower concentration of sperm and inability of the sperm to move at a normal speed, compared with the sperm of men of normal weight.

Moreover, the sperm of obese men had more defects than other sperm. These defects included defects in the head of the sperm, such as thin heads and pear-shaped heads.

All of these sperm abnormalities may make it more difficult for obese men to achieve conception, either through sexual intercourse or through In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF), the researchers said. But the study did not prove that obesity causes sperm quality to drop.

According to Rama Raju, this is the first study of abnormal sperm in obese men based on computer-aided assessment.

Health

Stop eating Kilishi, Dokun Olumokun warns.

Dokun Olumofin, brother to popular relationship doctor, Joro Olumfin, has just shared a photo of himself from a hospital bed with a ‘strong’ warning.

Olumokun Olumokun

Sharing details of his ailment Dokun wrote, ‘I reached the gate of death, but God didn’t allow me pass through. To all my living STAY AWAY from Kilishi. I repeat stay away from KILISHI. A word is enough for the wise. I thank God. Out of the hospital and kicking’.
‘Killichi resulted to a chemical in my blood that shut down my haemoglobin. In arterial oxygen my readings were under 60, in pulse reading in the 70s. I lost blood and had no flow of oxygen. Had to be transfused and needed support to breathe! I could not move, hardly knew what was going on around me. Doctors were confused, never seen anything like it. Eyes jaundiced etc. Honestly, i didn’t think I will make it’.

Image of Kilishi