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posted by cmn32480 on Monday May 11 2015, @04:43PM   Printer-friendly
from the DNA-needs-a-manual dept.

Nico Pitney reports that the urban poor in the United States are experiencing accelerated aging at the cellular level, and that chronic stress linked both to income level and racial-ethnic identity is driving this physiological deterioration. Researchers analyzed telomeres, tiny caps at the ends of DNA strands that protect cells from aging prematurely, of poor and lower middle-class black, white, and Mexican residents of Detroit and found that low-income residents of Detroit, regardless of race, have significantly shorter telomeres than the national average. "There are effects of living in high-poverty, racially segregated neighborhoods -- the life experiences people have, the physical exposures, a whole range of things -- that are just not good for your health," says Nobel laureate. Dr. Arline Geronimus, the lead author of the study, described as the most rigorous research of its kind examining how "structurally rooted social processes work through biological mechanisms to impact health." White Detroit residents who were lower-middle-class had the longest telomeres in the study. But the shortest telomeres belonged to poor whites. Black residents had about the same telomere lengths regardless of whether they were poor or lower-middle-class. And poor Mexicans actually had longer telomeres than Mexicans with higher incomes. Geronimus says these findings demonstrate the limitations of standard measures -- like race, income and education level -- typically used to examine health disparities. "We've relied on them too much to be the signifiers of everything that varies in the life experiences of difference racial or ethnic groups in different geographic locations and circumstances."

One co-author of this new study is Dr. Elizabeth Blackburn who helped to discover telomeres, an achievement that won her the Nobel Prize in physiology in 2009. Blackburn ticked off a list of studies in which people's experiences and perceptions directly correlated with their telomere lengths: whether people say they feel stressed or pessimistic; whether they feel racial discrimination towards others or feel discriminated against; whether they have experienced severely negative experiences in childhood, and so on. "These are all really adding up in this quantitative way," says Blackburn. "Once you get a quantitative relationship, then this is science, right?"

 
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  • (Score: 2) by rts008 on Tuesday May 12 2015, @02:20AM

    by rts008 (3001) on Tuesday May 12 2015, @02:20AM (#181757)

    What?
    Why?
    Breathing the air back then was more of a danger to my health than going to school was.

    And as for the 'wasted time', I have no clue what you mean. I saw it as a valuble learning experience that shaped who I am today. I never would have learned to fight well, and that built confidence. By adulthood, I could be tossed into new envoirments, new culures and new people, new territory, and land on my feet, able to effectively cope easily.(I should know-Uncle Sam tossed me often enough) I learned humility, pride, and respect, both for myself and for others. How could that be 'wasted time'?

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  • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Tuesday May 12 2015, @08:28AM

    by kaszz (4211) on Tuesday May 12 2015, @08:28AM (#181859) Journal

    Waste as in education interrupted by physical violence. But if that didn't happen then good for you. The secondary issue is the mental load of being on the alert at all times. But if that also worked out, then all is good.