Do presidents really age faster than rest of us?

Do presidents really age faster than rest of us? White House wannabes take note: Contrary to the idea that being president speeds up aging, a study shows that many U.S. commanders in chief have actually lived longer than their peers.

Using life expectancy data for men the same age as presidents on their inauguration days, the study found that 23 of 34 presidents who died of natural causes lived several years longer than expected.

The four former presidents still alive have already lived longer than predicted, or likely will because they're in good health, the study said.

"The graying of hair and wrinkling of the skin seen in presidents while they're in office are normal elements of human aging," said study author S. Jay Olshansky, a researcher on aging at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Stress can speed up those two outward signs of aging, and it's possible that job stress has made some presidents appear to age quickly. But the study shows that doesn't mean being doomed to an early grave.

"We don't actually know if they get more gray hair or more wrinkles" than other men their age. "But even if they did, we don't die of gray hair and wrinkles," Olshansky said.

Given that most of the 43 men who have served as president have been college-educated, wealthy and had access to the best doctors, their long lives are actually not that surprising, he said.

His study is published in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

The idea that presidents age quickly comes from casual observation and more studious assessments. Promoters of that idea include Dr. Michael Roizen, chairman of Cleveland Clinic's Wellness Institute and co-founder of RealAge, Inc. The "real age" concept suggests that age depends partly on lifestyle factors including stress and diet that either keep people young or prematurely age them. Roizen theorizes that presidents age twice as fast while in office.

Roizen said Olshansky's study doesn't disprove that idea and only shows "that in order to run for president you tend to be incredibly healthy."

Olshansky stands by his findings.

The 34 presidents who died of natural causes were aged 73 on average at death, a few months less than Olshansky's' life expectancy estimate. But under the accelerated aging theory, their average age of death would have been 68, he said.

The 23 presidents who lived longer than Olshansky's projections died at an average age of 78, 11 years later than under the accelerated aging theory.

The four presidents who were assassinated — Abraham Lincoln, James Garfield, William McKinley and John F. Kennedy — were aged 52 on average at death.

The first eight presidents were almost 80 years old on average when they died, at a time when the average life expectancy for men was less than age 35.

"It's absolutely extraordinary that they lived this long," Olshansky said.

That includes John Adams, who died at 90; James Madison, 85; and Thomas Jefferson, 83.

Ditto the last eight presidents who died — seven lived longer than expected; Lyndon Johnson was the only one who didn't. He died of a heart attack at age 64, 10 years less than his projected life expectancy and five years less than his life expectancy with accelerated aging, Olshansky said.

Among the more recent presidents, Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford both died at 93. Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush are both 87.

Olshansky has even done some projecting about 50-year-old President Barack Obama. Given his age when inaugurated, Obama's life expectancy would be 79, but Olshansky estimates that Obama will live to at least 82 because of his education, wealth and access to top-notch health care.

 

Share on Facebook

 

- Posted on December 7, 2011

Presidents do age faster than other people. They are the most hard working people especially Barack Obama as the first African American president. President Obama has had a lot of weight on his shoulders ever since he became president, the fact that he's black even makes it worse. Everyone has been talking about the economy while he struggles to keep the rest of the country together. He has many reasons as do the other presidents for aging faster than others.

Presidents go under alot of stress, so thats why they age faster. But still under all that stress, the presidents still dont know what real hard work is. And thats the kind of president we need, a real hard workin citizen, or an army general. Someone who knows what they are talkin about.

Well,not exactly. The presidents do a different kind of hard work. Think of it this way. Imagine you were Obama. He is trying his best to keep this country together. While getting blamed for the economy(though they're is no proof that he isn't destroying the economy). Then after that he has this whole racial issue with that Trey kid who got kill and obama said he could have been his son. After that this whole war and issue with iran. He is dealing with a lot of stress. Hard working people and generals deal with different kinds of stress. So calm your horses and relax man.

I find it hard to believe that men with the weight of the world on their shoulders don't age faster. Look at comparison pictures of Georg Bush's first term compared to the second. While granted it was eight years later he looked much older than his age. Also I think that Obama truly is not a good bacis for comparison because he is our first colored president and the aging process may be signifigantly diffrent than all our other presidents,

Yes they do because I believe they are way more stressed than us because they got the world in their hands. They have to put up with everybody always talking bad about them and way more. It is hard enough for one year but they have to go up to 4 years.

it dosent actually age you faster. the stress is what makes you look older. being the president isnt easy. if you go to war, every dead american is on your hands. stress is very unhealthy.

I believe because of all the stress the president goes through running the country the president does age a little faster. Take president Obama for example he had color to his hair at the start of his term. Now he has gray patches of hair. Also before he didn't have wrinkles. Now his face looks like a bulldog. So yes the president does age faster.

I believe that they do age faster because of all of the stress. Imagine being stressed all day for four years. then tell me you wouldn't age faster.

In my opinion presidents don't age faster it’s the appearance that makes you think that. Sure he is stressed out but stress doesn’t physically mean that you’re getting older. Many other people have stressful jobs that make them look tired out so you can't make a case saying it makes him older just because he's a president when other people are the same. I am sure if you had to work like that you would appear to look older than you really are. Squrtle12 you said he ages faster because of stress right? Well that can't be true because like I said before it will be based on opinion, some people may think he looks older and some may not. You don't change age by stress just your appearance of how you look and not your actual age.

When you are under an amount of stress ,you would start to produce wrinkles and weigh lesser than other people. And for President Obama, he is dealing with more situations than ever! That would be the reason that most of his hair is gray.