Multilingualism and Delayed Aging: New Research

New research published in Nature Aging suggests that multilingualism may contribute to slowing down aging. The study analyzed data from over 86,000 individuals in 27 European countries, aged 51-90 years.
The findings indicated that individuals who use only one language were twice as likely to experience accelerated aging, compared to multilingual individuals.
Researchers emphasize that promoting multilingualism could be part of strategies to support healthy aging at the population level.
*ΑΚΩ*
Last Updated: November 11, 2025 - 12:03