EVENT TICKETS
ALL TICKETS >
2025 New Year's Eve
Regular Events
Hurry! Get Your Tickets Now! Countdown has begun!!

2025 Midnight Madness NYE PARTY
Regular Events
Join us for an unforgettable night filled with glitz, glamour, and good vibes! The 2025 Midnight Madness NYE Party promises to be a night to remember with Live Music by DJ Malay

Big Fat New Year Eve 2025
Regular Events
Arizona's Largest & Hottest New Year’s Eve Event: Big Fat Bollywood Bash - Tuesday Dec 31, 2024. Tickets @ early bird pricing on sale now (limited quantity of group discount

Be grateful to people for healthier heartWashington, April 10 (AZINS) Showing gratitude towards people, appreciating their good work and having a thankful outlook towards life can result in an improved mental and physical health in patients with asymptomatic heart failure, a new research shows.

"We found that more gratitude in such people was associated with better mood, better sleep, less fatigue and lower levels of inflammatory biomarkers related to cardiac health," explained lead author Paul J. Mills, professor of family medicine and public health at the University of California, San Diego.

The study involved 186 men and women who had been diagnosed with asymptomatic (Stage B) heart failure for at least three months.

Stage B consists of patients who have developed structural heart disease but do not show symptoms of heart failure.

Using standard psychological tests, the researchers obtained scores for gratitude and spiritual well-being.

They then compared those scores with the patients' scores for depressive symptom severity, sleep quality, fatigue, self-efficacy (belief in one's ability to deal with a situation) and inflammatory markers.

They found higher gratitude scores were associated with better mood, higher quality sleep, more self-efficacy and less inflammation.

"We found that spiritual well-being was associated with better mood and sleep but it was the gratitude aspect of spirituality that accounted for those effects, not spirituality per se," Mills noted.

It seems that a more grateful heart is indeed a more healthy heart, the authors concluded in a paper published in the journal Spirituality in Clinical Practice.