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If You Want to Stay Healthy
in Retirement, Keep Working
Though many people look forward to retirement
as an absolute end to their working days, new research shows that
people who transition to temporary or part-time work after retiring
often experience better health.
The finding is especially noteworthy given the fact that more
people may be considering some kind of post-retirement work during
the current economic downswing, said study co-author Mo Wang of
the University of Maryland.
Psychologists looked at data from more than 12,000 people between
the ages of 51 and 61 at the beginning of the study. The participants
were interviewed every two years over a six-year period about
their health, finances and employment or retirement life.
The researchers found that people who worked after retiring
be it part time work, self-employment or a temporary job
were less likely to suffer from major health conditions including
cancer, high blood pressure, and cardiovascular disease, compared
to retirees who stopped working completely.
"People may believe that stopping working is a good thing,
but their health situation or mental situation may actually disagree,"
Wang said. "In reality work is a very functional thing for
us to maintain our health and psychological wellbeing."
The research can't pin down the cause of this correlation, but
Wang is not surprised by the results.
"If you keep working, that helps to maintain your lifestyle,"
he told LiveScience. "That makes your transition to retirement
less bumpy. You still have a daily structure, you do lunch at
a certain time. Working also helps you to maintain certain social
contacts and social support."
In addition to the physical effects of working, Wang and colleagues
also measured a mental-health effect. People who transitioned
to work in a field related to their pre-retirement job were less
likely to be depressed than people who transitioned to work in
a new field, or people who stopped working altogether.
"We can speculate why," Wang said. "If people
take to a new career field they are more likely to face new job
demands and new social environments, and that could be stressful."
And stress can kill, other studies have shown.
Wang and colleagues say their results hold even after they removed
any influence of people's previous health on their post-retirement
outcomes.
"Of course the best predictor of your current health is
your previous health," Wang said. "Compared to previous
health, [working] has a relatively small effect. But when it's
your health, any effect is important."
The study controlled for not only baseline physical and mental
health, but also for age, sex, education level, and financial
wealth. The findings are detailed in the October issue of the
Journal of Occupational Health Psychology.
Reference
Source 138
October 20, 2009
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