Why

The Survey’s Most Surprising Results

Before I get into what I found surprising, I want to point out that this was a survey about hypothetical treatment options. It was just a preliminary or pilot project just to see how people would answer; the head researcher said as much. The other factor was that subjects were 45 and younger. If an older population were asked the same questions, the results could be different. Or maybe not.

What surprised me was that even when asked about something as simple as drinking a cup of tea every day, less than 100% of the people said they would do it for an extra five years of life. The 7% who said they wouldn’t do anything stuns me. It’s a survey! You could misrepresent your answers—go ahead and lie!—who would know? Maybe it’s a function of the under-45 population surveyed; maybe they hadn’t yet started to be concerned about their limited lifespans.

What’s amazing is that most subjects already had high blood pressure according to the report. They knew the treatments were hypothetical, and yet some still couldn’t be bothered to try to add five more years of life. If they care that little about a hypothetical treatment, how are they approaching actual treatment?

On Saturday, I’ll focus on those who said they would do something to live five years longer and which option might be the best—assuming they were real. It all comes down to The Dash.

What are you prepared to do today?

Dr. Chet

 

Reference: AHA http://bit.ly/2uXd6qH