More longevity benefits for retirees between 66 and 72
Retiring after age 65
may help people live longer, says a study published online in the
Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. The risk of dying from
any cause over the study period was 11% lower among people who delayed
retirement for one year—until age 66—and fell further among people who
retired between the ages of 66 and 72, the study found.
The
benefits of remaining in the workforce occurred irrespective of gender,
lifestyle, education, income and occupation, the analysis showed.
Postponing
retirement may delay the natural age-related decline in physical,
cognitive and mental functioning, reducing the risk of chronic illness,
the study suggests. Mandatory retirement in the U.S. was abolished in
1986 except in certain professions, such as airline pilots and judges.
Researchers
at Oregon State University analyzed data from 2,956 people who were
employed at the start of a larger study in 1992 and fully retired at its
conclusion in 2010. Retirement age ranged from 55 to 77 years old. Of
the subjects, 33% retired at age 66 or older, 12% at age 65 and 55%
before 65. Just over a third cited health reasons for retiring.
Over
approximately 18 years of follow-up, 12.1% of healthy and 25.6% of
unhealthy retirees died. Compared with retiring at age 65, workers who
retired in good health at age 67 had a 21% lower risk of dying. By age
70, the risk was 44% lower, and at age 72 it was 56% lower.
For
workers with health issues, the risk of dying was 9% lower if they
retired at age 66, 17% lower at 67, 38% lower at 70 and 48% lower at 72.
Caveat: The analysis only included subjects born between 1931 and 1941.
Association of retirement age with mortality: a population-based longitudinal study among older adults in the USA
Culled from The Wall Street Journal
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