Lomas Tim, Padgett R Noah, Ritchie-Dunham James L, Pawelski James O, Shiba Koichiro, Johnson Byron R, VanderWeele Tyler J
Human Flourishing Program, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, Boston, MA, USA.
Sci Rep. 2025 Apr 30;15(1):13301. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-89853-w.
Although the importance of balance has been recognized in various specific domains, from work-life balance to a balanced diet, there has been curiously little attention to balance in life overall (i.e., across all aspects of living). As a result, there is relatively little understanding of its various dynamics, including of any childhood factors that may be associated with balance in adulthood. To gain a better understanding of such factors, we analysed cross-sectional wave 1 data on life balance in the Global Flourishing Study. This is a five-year (minimum) panel study investigating the predictors of human flourishing, involving (in this first year) 202,898 participants from 22 countries, and which includes the item, "In general, how often are the various aspects of your life in balance?" Here we looked at 13 childhood predictors of balance, using random effects meta-analyses to aggregate all findings in the main text, focusing on three research questions. First, how do different aspects of a child's upbringing predict balance in adulthood?, for which the most impactful factor was "feel[ing] like an outsider in your family" when growing up (Risk Ratio = 0.90), and the least was immigration status (0.98). Second, do these associations vary by country?, with the effect of being an outsider, for example, strongest in Australia, and weakest (not different than zero) in Egypt, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Nigeria, the Philippines, Poland, South Africa, and Turkey. Third, are the observed relationships robust to potential unmeasured confounding, as assessed by E-values, which overall was the case. These results shed new light on the cross-cultural and potential causal dynamics of this overlooked topic and provide the foundation for further enquiry.
尽管平衡的重要性在从工作与生活的平衡到均衡饮食等各个特定领域都已得到认可,但奇怪的是,人们对生活整体(即生活的各个方面)的平衡关注甚少。因此,人们对其各种动态,包括任何可能与成年期平衡相关的童年因素,了解相对较少。为了更好地理解这些因素,我们分析了全球繁荣研究中关于生活平衡的横断面第一波数据。这是一项为期五年(至少)的面板研究,旨在调查人类繁荣的预测因素,(在第一年)涉及来自22个国家的202,898名参与者,其中包括“总体而言,你生活的各个方面有多经常处于平衡状态?”这一项目。在这里,我们研究了13个童年时期平衡的预测因素,使用随机效应荟萃分析在正文中汇总所有研究结果,重点关注三个研究问题。第一,孩子成长环境的不同方面如何预测成年期的平衡?对此,最具影响力的因素是成长过程中“感觉自己在家庭中像个局外人”(风险比 = 0.90),影响最小的是移民身份(0.98)。第二,这些关联在不同国家是否存在差异?例如,作为局外人的影响在澳大利亚最强,在埃及、中国香港、印度尼西亚、尼日利亚、菲律宾、波兰、南非和土耳其最弱(与零无异)。第三,如通过E值评估,观察到的关系对潜在的未测量混杂因素是否具有稳健性,总体情况确实如此。这些结果为这个被忽视的话题的跨文化和潜在因果动态提供了新的见解,并为进一步的研究奠定了基础。