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erronis

(25,174 posts)
Wed Jul 8, 2026, 12:40 PM Wednesday

What do Sardinia's Blue Zone elders do differently that helps them age so well physically and mentally?

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2026-07-sardinia-blue-zone-elders-differently.html
Sanjukta Mondal

Openness, conscientiousness, and agreeableness were linked to better psychological well-being.


Blue Zone participants also spent more time in leisure activities that are cognitively or physically stimulating.


People are living longer than they did at the turn of the 20th century, but living well into old age depends on more than a healthy lifestyle. Scientists say it is also shaped by how we think, adapt and connect with others.

In the early 2000s, scientists first identified certain locations where the residents not only live long lives but also healthy ones with a high quality of life. They called these regions the Blue Zones, which include central-eastern Sardinia (Italy), Okinawa (Japan), Ikaria (Greece) and Nicoya (Costa Rica).

In a recent study, researchers wanted to figure out whether personality traits, along with lifestyle factors, set people of the Sardinian Blue Zone apart from those in neighboring rural areas and contribute to their successful aging.

After following 125 community-dwelling adults ages 71-101 from the Sardinian Blue Zone and a nearby non-Blue Zone, the researchers found that those living in the Blue Zone scored significantly higher on openness to experience.

They were more curious, more willing to try new activities and showed greater emotional competence, which is the ability to understand and share their feelings with others. Their daily routines reflected this mindset. On average, they spent 11.3 hours a week on hobbies and mentally stimulating activities, like reading and gardening, compared with 6.8 hours among older adults living in the nearby rural area.

The results showed that neuroticism, a tendency toward anxiety, depression, self-doubt and other negative feelings, was the personality trait most clearly linked to worse health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in this sample.

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What do Sardinia's Blue Zone elders do differently that helps them age so well physically and mentally? (Original Post) erronis Wednesday OP
The newest New Yorker has an article cyclonefence 19 hrs ago #1

cyclonefence

(5,171 posts)
1. The newest New Yorker has an article
Thu Jul 9, 2026, 07:54 PM
19 hrs ago

about a book that was just published called Eat Your Ice Cream: Six Simple Rules for a Long and Healthy Life that debunks the idea of these blue zones. I think you can read the article for free if you give them your email:
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2026/07/06/morbid-saul-justin-newman-book-review-eat-your-ice-cream-ezekiel-j-emanuel

Apparently, many if not most of those stories about people living to great age because of diet, life style, etc. are bogus; what you need to do is be sensible--get enough sleep, eat a healthy diet, don't smoke--all the things we know we ought to be doing. The "blue zones" are essentially made up of whole cloth. The "eat your ice cream" part refers to a study that showed eating a serving of ice cream every day (guess what?) can prevent diabetes!

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