It’s interesting about the men, isn’t it? Marriage confers many benefits on women — though the early feminists were venomously anti-marriage — but study after study has found that when it comes to health and longevity, men benefit even more than women from tying the knot — and keeping it tied.
The Harvard Men’s Health Watch, for example, cites a report from the Framingham Offspring Study that evaluated 3,682 adults over a 10-year period for heart-related conditions. Even after taking into account major risk factors such as age, body-fat percentage, smoking, blood pressure, diabetes and cholesterol, married men had a 46 percent lower rate of death than unmarried men.
Other studies cited by Harvard have found that married men have lower levels of depression, reduced incidence of Alzheimer’s disease, improved blood sugar levels, and, as in the studies mentioned above, lower levels of cancer and better survival rates after diagnosis.
When examined through the marriage lens, other differentials in American life can be understood as flowing from this most basic of human relationships. Marriage confers not just health and longevity, but wealth, life satisfaction, community engagement and other social goods. There is a large income gap between white and black Americans. But the marriage rate among African-Americans has been significantly below that of others for several generations — though the white and Hispanic rates of unmarried parenting are sharply increasing. According to 2010 Census data, African-American two-earner married couples had mean incomes above the national average for married couples.
The results of the retreat from marriage have been evident in the black community for some time — but were co-morbid with other things. Were the high crime rates and poor school performance the result of the collapse of marriage or the residue of slavery and Jim Crow? Were the higher rates of diseases such as diabetes and heart disease in the African-American community related to family structure or poverty — and if the latter, was the poverty the cause or the effect of family structure?
With the Hispanic and white populations now retreating from marriage as well, many of the pathologies that had been politely called “inner city” woes — widespread drug abuse, joblessness, mental illness and school failure — are on the upswing among whites. And now there is no comparable history of discrimination to cloud the picture.
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