A promising avenue for improving physical health and reducing health risks in older adulthood is intervening on transdiagnostic protective factors-those that form the mechanisms of several diseases. A potential candidate for a transdiagnostic protective factor is subjective well-being (SWB). Despite the accumulating evidence favoring SWB as a protective factor, individual studies tend to neglect the cumulative effect of publication bias, explicitly specifying a causal model, and the possibility of alternative causal models that guide the selection of confounders. Using three waves of longitudinal data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study of Aging with a sample of 51 338 older adults, we tested whether the relationship between life satisfaction and 23 health outcomes (eg, cancer, arthritis, asthma) were robust to alternative causal model specifications. A one standard deviation increase in life satisfaction, under the preferred causal model, predicted a 3-31% reduction in risk of diagnosis for several health outcomes three years later, including osteoarthritis, movement disorders, and respiratory tract diseases and predicted greater self-rated general health. Importantly, the effects persisted under different causal model specifications. These results suggest that life satisfaction is prospectively linked to multiple positive health outcomes and demonstrate the value of an analytical framework that acknowledges the uncertainty inherent in confounder selection.
Panasiuk et al. (Thu,) studied this question.