
Divorce rates in older adults rise when wives get sick, study finds
Older adults are divorcing at increasingly higher rates these days, and it could have to do with illness – depending on who is getting sick. A new study suggests that health plays a factor, but gender roles might be the linchpin behind it all.
A study by Italian researchers published in the Journal of Marriage and Family considered the relationship between health and the divorce rates in older adults.
The study used 18 years of data – ranging from 2004 to 2022 – from 25,542 European heterosexual couples aged 50 to 64.
A university professor suggests that one of the reason for more 'grey divorce' is people's increased longevity. Photo: Shutterstock
It showed some eye-opening results. When the wives in marriages between older adults became ill or suffered some kind of physical limitation, the divorce rates began to rise.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
35 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Knee surgery patients with ‘penicillin allergy' face higher infection risk: study
Patients labelled as allergic to penicillin – usually incorrectly – are three times more likely to develop a serious joint infection after knee surgery as they receive weaker antibiotics, a Hong Kong study has found, with researchers urging them to seek an evaluation especially before their operation. A team from the University of Hong Kong, which released the findings of the study on Wednesday, said that about 90 per cent of patients recorded as being allergic to the commonly used antibiotic were wrongly labelled. 'We found that if patients are wrongly labelled as allergic to penicillin, there can be a very serious consequence, which is infection,' said study co-leader Dr Steve Cheung Man-hong, an honorary clinical assistant professor in the department of orthopaedics and traumatology at HKU. 'There should be appropriate and timely evaluation on allergy labels.' The study analysed 4,730 patients who had undergone knee replacement surgery at Queen Mary Hospital in Pok Fu Lam between 1993 and 2001. Among them, 165 were labelled allergic to penicillin, the most common and first-line antibiotic used by doctors before joint surgery to prevent infections.


South China Morning Post
11 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
He quit drinking and lost 20kg after alcohol abuse led to terrifying health scare
People experience wake-up calls at various stages in their lives. For Derry Ainsworth, his big one came in 2024 while lying alone in pain in a Hong Kong hospital bed surrounded by the screams of sick and dying patients. Advertisement The Hong Kong-based British photographer's health nightmare started on July 24, 2024, when he woke up with what he thought was a mild hangover. Then severe abdominal pain took over. He called an ambulance and, in hospital, spent the first few hours crying in pain on a toilet floor until a nurse rushed him for a CAT scan and gave him morphine. The diagnosis was severe acute pancreatitis (SAP), a serious condition in which the pancreas – a gland behind the stomach that plays a vital role in both digestion and blood sugar regulation – becomes severely inflamed. This can lead to organ failure and even death. Derry Ainsworth in hospital in July 2024 after being diagnosed with severe acute pancreatitis. Photo: Derry Ainsworth While gallstones and alcohol abuse are common causes of acute pancreatitis, many factors can lead to SAP. Sometimes the cause is unknown. Advertisement Ainsworth, who was 34 at the time, was told that the situation would have been much worse if the infection had entered his bloodstream or shut down his surrounding organs.


South China Morning Post
2 days ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong government to get more schools to join health programme
Hong Kong authorities will step up efforts to encourage more schools, including international ones, to join a government programme that aims to promote students' health, with nearly 70 per cent of the city's institutions already part of it. The Department of Health said that 808 institutions joined the Whole School Health Programme during the 2024-25 academic year, and tailor-made health reports and recommendations for participating schools would be released on Tuesday. Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan, a department consultant of community medicine, said the number of schools that had taken part had surpassed the original target of 600. She said the department would continue promoting the programme and urged more institutions, including international schools, to sign up. 'Currently, the participating schools are mainly local schools. We hope to have more international schools joining the programme next year,' she said. Among those already in the programme are 356 primary schools, 404 secondary schools and 48 special schools, accounting for nearly 70 per cent of all the schools in Hong Kong.