| Literature DB >> 24330730 |
Iris van der Heide1, Rogier M van Rijn, Suzan J W Robroek, Alex Burdorf, Karin I Proper.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several studies regarding the effect of retirement on physical as well as mental health have been performed, but the results thereof remain inconclusive. The aim of this review is to systematically summarise the literature on the health effects of retirement, describing differences in terms of voluntary, involuntary and regulatory retirement and between blue-collar and white-collar workers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24330730 PMCID: PMC4029767 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-1180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Terms used for the database search in PubMed, Embase and WoS
| Exposure | Retirement[MeSH] OR retirement[All Fields] OR pensions[MeSH] OR pensions[All Fields] OR pension[All Fields] |
| Health outcome | (Health[MeSH:NoExp] OR health[tw] OR “well-being”[All Fields] OR “health status”[MeSH:NoExp] OR “health status”[All Fields] OR “health behaviour”[MeSH] OR “health behaviour”[All Fields] OR “health behaviour”[All Fields] OR “physical health”[All Fields]) OR (“mental health”[MeSH] OR “mental health”[All fields]) OR (hospitalization[MeSH] OR hospitalization[All Fields] OR hospitalisation[All Fields]) OR (“quality of life”[MeSH] OR “quality of life”[All Fields]) OR (“chronic disease”[MeSH] OR “chronic disease”[All Fields] OR “chronic illness”) |
| Study design | (“Cohort studies”[MeSH] OR “cohort studies”[All Fields] OR “cohort study”[All Fields]) OR (“longitudinal studies”[All Fields] OR “longitudinal study”[All Fields] OR longitudinally[All Fields]) OR (“prospective studies”[All Fields] OR “prospective study”[All Fields]) OR (“follow-up studies”[All Fields] OR “follow-up study”[All Fields] OR follow-up[All Fields]) OR (“retrospective studies”[All Fields] OR “retrospective study”[All Fields]) |
Criteria list for assessment of the methodological quality of prospective cohort studies [20-22]
| 1. | Adequate description of sampling frame, recruitment methods, period of recruitment, and place of recruitmentc | I | 64% |
| 2. | Participation rate at baseline at least 80%, or if the nonresponse was not selective | V/P | 23% |
| 3. | Adequate description of baseline study sample for key characteristicsc | I | 32% |
| 4. | Provision of the exact | I | 68% |
| 5. | Provision of exact information on follow-up duration | I | 95% |
| 6. | Response at short-term follow-up was at least 80% of the | V/P | 50% |
| 7. | Information on not selective nonresponse during follow-up measurementd | V/P | 18% |
| 8. | Adequate measurement of retirement status | V/P | 23% |
| 9. | Retirement status was assessed at a time prior to the measurement of the health outcome | V/P | 86% |
| 10. | Adequate measurement of the health outcome | V/P | 64% |
| 11. | The statistical model used was appropriate and point estimates with measures of variability (CI or SE) have been provided | V/P | 59% |
| 12. | The number of cases was at least 10 times the number of the independent variables | V/P | 100% |
| 13. | Important confounders were identified and there has been adjusted for | V/P | 36% |
| 14. | No selective reporting of results | V/P | 91% |
aRating of criteria: + = yes; - = no; ? = unclear.
bI, criterion on informativeness; V/P, criterion on validity/precision.
cAdequate = sufficient information to be able to repeat the study; + is given only if adequate information is given on all characteristics.
d+ is given only if nonselective dropout on key characteristics (age, gender, retirement status, health outcomes) is reported in the text or tables.
Figure 1Flow diagram literature search for longitudinal studies on retirement and health.
Evidence for the impact of retirement on various health outcomes from longitudinal studies on retirement and health
| Perceived health | 0 23 | 0 25, 31, 32 | Insufficient evidence |
| + 11, 17 | + 28 | ||
| - 35 | | ||
| ? 34 | ? 33 | ||
| Mental health | + 16, 23, 24, 26, 27, 36 | + 25, 31, 37, 38 | Strong evidence |
| | 0 28, 30, 31 | ||
| Physical health | | | |
| Somatic complaints | 0 29 | | Insufficient evidence |
| Physical functioning | - 26, 27 | 0 38 | Insufficient evidencec |
| Physical fatigue | + 16 | 0 31 | Insufficient evidence |
| Disability | | ? 41 | Insufficient evidence |
| Chronic or (irreversible) illness | 0 16 | 0 40 | Insufficient evidence |
| - 39 | - 28 | ||
| | + 31 | ||
| Perceived serious health problems | 0 34 | Insufficient evidence | |
a? = unclear (including not shown to be statistically significant); 0 = no change; + = improvement; - = decline.
bStrong evidence: consistent findings in multiple (≥ 2) high-quality studies; Moderate evidence: consistent findings in one high-quality study and at least one low-quality study, or consistent findings in multiple low-quality studies; Insufficient evidence: only one study available or inconsistent findings in multiple (≥ 2) studies. Consistency of results was determined following that for at least 75% of the studies reporting on a particular relation the results should be in the same direction, defined by p < 0.05 [20-22].
cInsufficient evidence because both studies use data from the same study.
Figure 2Difference in the prevalence (%) of poor perceived general health between follow-up (after retirement) and baseline (prior retirement) in longitudinal studies on retirement and health. The study quality and the relative weight of the study in % are presented in brackets under the studies listed on the Y-axis.
Figure 3Difference in the prevalence (%) of good perceived general health between follow-up (after retirement) and baseline (prior retirement) in longitudinal studies on retirement and health. The study quality and the relative weight of the study in % are presented in brackets under the studies listed on the Y-axis.
Figure 4Difference in the prevalence (%) of poor physical health between follow-up (after retirement) and baseline (prior retirement) in longitudinal studies on retirement and health. The study quality and the relative weight of the study in % are presented in brackets under the studies listed on the Y-axis.