Sense of Purpose Linked to Living Longer at Any Age Study
Author: Association for Psychological Science
Published: 2014/05/14 - Updated: 2026/02/14
Publication Type: Research, Study, Analysis
Category Topic: Longevity - Related Publications
Page Content: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates
Synopsis: This research, conducted by Patrick Hill of Carleton University and Nicholas Turiano of the University of Rochester Medical Center, examined data from over 6,000 participants in the nationally representative Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) study over a 14-year follow-up period. The work was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institute on Aging, and has received Open Data and Open Materials badges, meaning its data and methods are publicly available for verification. The key finding is that people who reported a stronger sense of purpose in life had a consistently lower risk of dying during the study period - and this held true for younger, middle-aged, and older adults alike, even after accounting for other psychological well-being factors like positive relationships and emotions. This is particularly relevant for seniors, retirees, and people with disabilities who may be navigating major life transitions and searching for meaningful direction, as the study suggests that cultivating purpose is a measurable factor in longevity regardless of age or life stage - Disabled World (DW).
Introduction
Sense of Purpose Can Add Years to Your Life
The research has clear implications for promoting positive aging and adult development, says lead researcher Patrick Hill of Carleton University in Canada:
"Our findings point to the fact that finding a direction for life, and setting overarching goals for what you want to achieve can help you actually live longer, regardless of when you find your purpose," says Hill. "So the earlier someone comes to a direction for life, the earlier these protective effects may be able to occur."
Main Content
Previous studies have suggested that finding a purpose in life lowers risk of mortality above and beyond other factors that are known to predict longevity. The word "longevity" is sometimes used as a synonym for "life expectancy" in demography or known as "long life", especially when it concerns someone or something lasting longer than expected.
But, Hill points out, almost no research examined whether the benefits of purpose vary over time, such as across different developmental periods or after important life transitions.
Hill and colleague Nicholas Turiano of the University of Rochester Medical Center decided to explore this question, taking advantage of the nationally representative data available from the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) study.
The researchers looked at data from over 6000 participants, focusing on their self-reported purpose in life (e.g., "Some people wander aimlessly through life, but I am not one of them") and other psychosocial variables that gaged their positive relations with others and their experience of positive and negative emotions.
Over the 14-year follow-up period represented in the MIDUS data, 569 of the participants had died (about 9% of the sample). Those who had died had reported lower purpose in life and fewer positive relations than did survivors.
Greater purpose in life consistently predicted lower mortality risk across the lifespan, showing the same benefit for younger, middle-aged, and older participants across the follow-up period.
This consistency came as a surprise to the researchers:
"There are a lot of reasons to believe that being purposeful might help protect older adults more so than younger ones," says Hill. "For instance, adults might need a sense of direction more, after they have left the workplace and lost that source for organizing their daily events. In addition, older adults are more likely to face mortality risks than younger adults."
"To show that purpose predicts longer lives for younger and older adults alike is pretty interesting, and underscores the power of the construct," he explains.
Purpose had similar benefits for adults regardless of retirement status, a known mortality risk factor. And the longevity benefits of purpose in life held even after other indicators of psychological well-being, such as positive relations and positive emotions, were taken into account.
"These findings suggest that there's something unique about finding a purpose that seems to be leading to greater longevity," says Hill.
The researchers are currently investigating whether having a purpose might lead people to adopt healthier lifestyles, thereby boosting longevity.
Hill and Turiano are also interested in examining whether their findings hold for outcomes other than mortality.
"In so doing, we can better understand the value of finding a purpose throughout the lifespan, and whether it provides different benefits for different people," Hill concludes.
Preparation of the manuscript was supported through funding from the National Institute of Mental Health (Grant T32-MH018911-23), and the data collection was supported by Grant P01-AG020166 from the National Institute on Aging. All data and materials have been made publicly available via the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. This article has received badges for Open Data and Open Materials.
Insights, Analysis, and Developments
Editorial Note: What makes this study stand out is not simply the finding that purpose matters - most people would intuitively agree with that - but the data showing that the longevity benefit applies equally across every age group. The assumption going in was that older adults, particularly those who had left the workforce and lost a built-in structure for daily life, would benefit the most. Instead, younger adults showed the same protective effect, which suggests that purpose operates as something deeper than just staying busy or having a schedule. For retirees, for people adjusting to life with a new disability, and for anyone who has experienced a major disruption to how they spend their days, this research offers something concrete: finding direction is not just good for mental health in an abstract sense, it is statistically associated with living longer. The fact that this held true independent of positive emotions and social relationships means purpose appears to carry its own distinct biological or behavioral weight, a question the researchers are continuing to investigate - Disabled World (DW).Attribution/Source(s): This quality-reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by Association for Psychological Science and published on 2014/05/14, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.