Author/Authors :
Sarah C. Olesen، نويسنده , , Peter Butterworth، نويسنده , , Bryan Rodgers، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Purpose Poor mental health may influence people’s
decisions about, and ability to, keep working into later
adulthood. The identification of factors that drive retirement
provides valuable information for policymakers
attempting to mitigate the effects of population ageing.
This study examined whether mental health predicts subsequent
retirement in a general population sample, and
whether this association varied with the timing of
retirement.
Methods Longitudinal data from 2,803 people aged
45–75 years were drawn from five waves of the Household
Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey.
Discrete-time survival analyses were used to estimate
the association between mental health and retirement.
Mental health was measured using the Mental Health Index
(MHI-5). The relative influences of other health, social,
financial, and work-related predictors of retirement were
considered to determine the unique contribution of mental
health to retirement behaviour.
Results Poor mental health was associated with higher
rates of retirement in men (hazard rate ratio, HRR 1.19,
95% CI 1.01–1.29), and workforce exit more generally in
women (HRR 1.14, 95% CI 1.07–1.22). These associations
varied with the timing of retirement and were driven by
early retirees specifically. Physical functioning, income,
social activity, job conditions (including job stress for
women and job control for men), and aspects of job satisfaction
also predicted subsequent retirement.
Conclusions Poor mental and physical health predict
workforce departure in mid-to-late adulthood, particularly
early retirement. Strategies to accommodate health conditions
in the workplace may reduce rates of early retirement
and encourage people to remain at work into later
adulthood.