Why It Pays To Increase Your Word Power
Reader's Digest India|October 2017

Proof that reading boosts your brain. 

Brandon Specktor
Why It Pays To Increase Your Word Power

Here’s a simple question—answer it honestly, because your response could boost the amount of pleasure in your daily life, delay dementia and even help you live longer: How many hours did you spend reading books last week?

This question has arrived in thousands of homes in the US every other year since 1992 as part of the University of Michigan’s Health and Retirement Study (HRS). A minor item on a massive survey of more than 20,000 retirees, it had long gone ignored in the analysis of elder brain health. But in 2016, when researchers at the Yale School of Public Health dug into 12 years of HRS data about the reading habits and health of more than 3,600  men and women over the age of 50, a hopeful pattern emerged: People who read books—fiction or non-fiction, poetry or prose—for as little as 30  minutes a day over several years were living an average of two years longer than people who didn’t read anything at all. Odder still, book readers who reported more than three hours of reading each week were 23 per cent less likely to die between 2001 and 2012 than their peers who read only newspapers or magazines.

If you’re reading this, it’s safe to assume you don’t need to be sold on the merits of the written word. You may already be familiar with recent findings that suggest children as young as six months who read books with their parents several times a week show stronger literacy skills four years later, score higher on intelligence tests and land better jobs than non-readers. But recent research argues that reading may be just as important in adulthood. When practised over a lifetime, reading and language-acquisition skills can support healthy brain functioning in big ways. Simply put: word power increases brain power.

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