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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Med.

Sec. Family Medicine and Primary Care

Volume 12 - 2025 | doi: 10.3389/fmed.2025.1667645

This article is part of the Research TopicLifestyle behaviors and chronic diseases: pathways, interventions, knowledge and public health challengesView all articles

How Happy is Healthy Enough? Uncovering the Happiness Threshold for Global Non-Communicable Disease Prevention

Provisionally accepted
iulia  cristina iugaiulia cristina iuga1*Syeda  Rabab JAFRISyeda Rabab JAFRI2Horia  iugaHoria iuga3
  • 1Universitatea 1 Decembrie 1918 din Alba Iulia, Alba Iulia, Romania
  • 2Lahore School of Economics, Lahore, Pakistan
  • 3Universitatea de Medicina si Farmacie Iuliu Hatieganu, Cluj-Napoca, Romania

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Objectives: To determine whether the relationship between subjective well‑being (happiness) and premature mortality from non‑communicable diseases (NCDs) is non‑linear and to identify the happiness level at which population health gains are maximised. Methods: A balanced panel of 123 countries (2006‑2021) was analysed. A Panel Smooth Transition Regression (PSTR) model examined the effect of national Life‑Ladder scores on the 30‑to‑70‑year NCD mortality rate, controlling for alcohol consumption, obesity prevalence, urbanisation, PM2.5 exposure, health expenditure, GDP per capita and governance quality. The Life‑Ladder index served as the transition variable, allowing coefficients to vary across two regimes separated by an estimated threshold. Dynamic feedback was explored with panel Vector‑Autoregression (VAR) and impulse‑response analysis. Results: The model identified a single threshold at 2.7 Life‑Ladder points and rejected parameter constancy (LM‑F = 8.85, p < 0.001). Above this level, each 1 % rise in happiness decreased NCD mortality by 0.43 % (p < 0.001); below it, the effect was nil. Obesity and alcohol consistently raised deaths, whereas urbanisation turned from harmful to protective in the high‑happiness regime. Health spending remained protective, and GDP per capita mattered only beyond the threshold. Complementary VAR and impulse‑response analyses confirm a bidirectional negative linkage between happiness and NCD mortality and show that obesity, alcohol use and air pollution remain positive drivers of deaths. PVAR confirmed bidirectional Granger causality between happiness and NCD mortality and showed that a positive happiness shock elicits a sustained downward mortality response with no sign reversal. Conclusion: Subjective well-being (happiness) appears to function as a population health asset only once a minimum threshold of approximately 2.7 (on the 0–10 Life Ladder scale) is surpassed. Beyond this point, higher levels of happiness are associated with progressively lower NCD mortality, with no evidence within the observed range of adverse effects from ‘excessive’ happiness. Public health strategies that elevate well-being above this tipping point-while concurrently addressing obesity, alcohol consumption, and environmental hazards-may initiate a reinforcing cycle of improved happiness and extended, healthier lifespans.

Keywords: happiness, Non-communicable diseases, global health, life satisfaction, Health Policy

Received: 16 Jul 2025; Accepted: 18 Aug 2025.

Copyright: © 2025 iuga, JAFRI and iuga. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: iulia cristina iuga, Universitatea 1 Decembrie 1918 din Alba Iulia, Alba Iulia, Romania

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