Looking
pretty/handsome is not just a good business, but now a technique to fight illness,
claims US scientists.
The
research claims attractive people are less likely to get tinnitus, asthma,
diabetes, and high blood pressure.
The
more physically attractive men and women are rated, the more unlikely they are
to suffer from a wide range of health problems, from high cholesterol to
depression. They also feel healthier, have less time off work and are diagnosed
with fewer physical and mental health conditions during their lifetime.
These
extraordinary findings by U.S. researchers are based on a study of 15,000 men
and women aged 24 to 35 who have been followed since they were ten. It’s
the biggest study yet to find links between attractiveness and good health, and
the first to home in on a number of individual diseases.