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Still not caught Covid? It might be down to how attractive you are, scientists say

BEAUTY may be more than just skin deep, after all.

Scientists have suggested that the more attractive you are, the stronger your immunity is - and therefore, you’re at lower risk of catching Covid.

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How beautiful others deem you may be related to your risk of catching Covid, a study suggestsCredit: Alamy

It could explain why you or a friend has still managed to dodge Covid, despite being exposed to it a dozen times. 

The theory was tested on a bunch of participants.

Researchers took photos and blood tests of 79 women and 80 men at Texas Christian University.

Afterward, 492 other volunteers were asked to rate the facial attractiveness of the participants based on the facial photos that were taken.

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Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, as they say.

However, in the opinion of the study, researchers, universal understanding of “good looks” transcend time and even cultures. 

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“Features such as clear skin, prominent cheekbones, bright eyes and full, red lips have been deemed attractive throughout recorded human history," said the paper, published by .

A symmetrical face has also been consistently shown as favourable in research.

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The study found that the most attractive participants had clear makers of better immunity in their blood samples.

For example, they had higher levels of phagocytosis - “the process by which specific white blood cells ingest foreign particles” - which is useful for fighting bacterial illnesses.

But in terms of viruses, such as Covid, it appeared only the hottest men had built-in protection.

Women rated men with "high functioning" killer immune cells (that protect the body from viral infection) more handsome compared with men with a "low functioning" cells.

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But men saw women as both beautiful and lesser so regardless of their virus-fighting cells.

'More than a pretty face'

The researchers propose that it’s not a person’s beauty that makes them less likely to get sick.

Rather, their highly functioning immune system makes them appear more beautiful, as voted by other people. 

They propose that facial features considered to be attractive could actually be markers of good health.

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“The features that humans universally perceive as attractive may provide cues to unobservable qualities possessed by a target that impact fitness, including health and immune function,” the paper said. 

It implies that our attraction to a beautiful person is rooted in trying to find a partner that will benefit the survival of our offspring.

Features such as bright eyes and clear skin can also be an indicator that a person is healthy.  

"It is also possible that links between attractiveness and health may be obscured in modern humans, given that human mate preferences were forged before the advent of modern medicine," the authors .

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