Overly optimistic expectations for the future can be hazardous to older people's health, a long-term study suggests.
Researchers from the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany, along with scientists from Berlin and Zurich, found older people who saw a darker future for themselves tended to live more healthily and longer than those who were more optimistic.
The results contradicted earlier studies finding that optimists lived longer.
"Pessimistic expectations of the future may encourage seniors to pay better attention to their health and protect themselves against dangers,'' said Frieder Lang, director of the Institute of Psychogerontology at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.
Researchers analysed survey data that had been gathered between 1993 and 2003 from more than 10,000 participants, who had been asked each year to rate both their current life satisfaction and expected life satisfaction in five years.