2005
DOI: 10.1136/bmj.38586.448704.e0
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Age at retirement and long term survival of an industrial population: prospective cohort study

Abstract: Objective To assess whether early retirement is associated with better survival.

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Cited by 71 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…More 3 recent papers acknowledge this, but have problems directly dealing with it. Tsai et al (2005) measure the post-65 retirement mortality rates for individuals, regardless of the age of retirement.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More 3 recent papers acknowledge this, but have problems directly dealing with it. Tsai et al (2005) measure the post-65 retirement mortality rates for individuals, regardless of the age of retirement.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in British immigrants and those from other OECD countries these mortality rate ratios were, respectively, 1.14 (1.04 to Several studies have shown that early retirement is associated with increased mortality. [20][21][22] Some authors have noted that mortality from cardiovascular disease associated with early retirement may also be attributed to changes after retirement -reduced income, abandoning healthy habits, or psychological consequences -that increase the risk of developing these diseases. 23 We found that immigrants residing in the preferred destination area had a higher proportion of retired people than immigrants residing in the rest of Spain.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[20][21][22][24][25] Both cardiovascular disease and the rest of diseasesdigestive, respiratory, metabolic, renal -that constitute the leading causes of death are chronic diseases that generally have a prolonged natural history before retirement. Thus, the higher mortality from these causes of death in the preferred destination area suggests poor health before retirement and, consequently, a possible unhealthy immigrant bias in mortality in this area.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unfortunately, there are relatively few studies on the topic of retirement and health, and the findings have been mixed: some studies show retirement to be beneficial for health (Gall et al, 1997;Drentea, 2002;Mein et al, 2003;Mojon-Azzi et al, 2007), some that retirement has no effect on health (Ekerdt et al, 1983;Butterworth et al, 2006;Villamil et al, 2006;van Solinge, 2007), and some that health deteriorates after retirement (Bossé et al, 1987;Morris et al, 1994;Buxton et al, 2005;Tsai et al, 2005;Bamia et al, 2007;Alavinia and Burdorf, 2008;).…”
Section: What Can We Do To Address These Inequalities? Our Proposalmentioning
confidence: 99%