| Literature DB >> 26891722 |
Elizabeth Mokyr Horner1, Mark R Cullen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Is retirement good or bad for health? Disentangling causality is difficult. Much of the previous quasi-experimental research on the effect of health on retirement used self-reported health and relied upon discontinuities in public retirement incentives across Europe. The current study investigated the effect of retirement on health by exploiting discontinuities in private retirement incentives to test the effect of retirement on health using a quasi-experimental study design.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26891722 PMCID: PMC4759763 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1318-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Summary statistics, administrative data (1996–2009)
| Mean (SD) | Range | |
|---|---|---|
| Year | 2001.3 (3.5) | 1996-2009 |
| Year of birth | 1940.2 (2.3) | 1932-1944 |
| Age Retired | 62.4 (2.5) | 54-70 |
| Number of Plants | 30 | |
| Number of People, Total | 1,841 | |
| Number of People, Sufficient Data Available | 1,008 | |
| Number of People, Observed Continuously | 659 | |
| % Person-years retired | 31 % | |
| % People insured while working | 83.1 % | |
| % People insured while retired, pre age 65 | 69.1 % | |
| % People with supplemental insurance age 65+ | 26.4 % | |
| % Unionized Men Retired by Age 61 | 15.5 % | |
| % Unionized Men Retired by Age 62 | 26.1 % | % Δ = 68 % |
| % Unionized Men Retired by Age 63 | 51.0 % | % Δ = 95 % |
| % Unionized Men Retired by Age 64 | 69.3 % | % Δ = 36 % |
| % Unionized Men Retired by Age 65 | 78.4 % | % Δ = 13 % |
Fig. 1Cross-sectional disease prevalence (1996–2009)
Effect of retirement on health for only continuously insured individuals, administrative data (1996–2009)
| Coefficient [Standard Error] | Row Mean | SOO | SOO & Risk | IV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | 44 % | 0.0613 | 0.0453 | −0.0891 |
| [0.0517] | [0.0463] | [0.0780] | ||
| Diabetes | 17 % | 0.0846** | 0.0846* | 0.00563 |
| [0.0319] | [0.0381] | [0.0477] | ||
| Asthma | 8 % | 0.0157 | 0.00029 | −0.0729*** |
| [0.0137] | [0.0148] | [0.0222] | ||
| Arthritis | 26 % | 0.0742 | 0.0689 | −0.0727 |
| [0.0482] | [0.0580] | [0.0557] | ||
| Major Depression | 3 % | 0.00967 | 0.0115 | −0.00365 |
| [0.0126] | [0.0152] | [0.0199] | ||
| Inpatient Visits | 0.11 | 0.0493** | 0.0368 | −0.0826 |
| [0.0211] | [0.0220] | [0.138] | ||
| Outpatient Visits | 4.84 | 1.688*** | 1.456*** | 0.0899 |
| [0.206] | [0.257] | [0.422] | ||
| N | 659 | 659 | 524 | 659 |
| Excluded Instrument F-Stat | N/A | N/A | 22.49 |
***p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1
Results presented are derived from fourteen independent regression models using administrative data. For hypertension, diabetes, asthma, arthritis, and major depression, the outcome variable was whether the individual had—this year, or previously—received a diagnosis for this illness, using the algorithm described in the Data section. For inpatient and outpatient visits, the outcome variable was the number of face-to-face, unique visits of that type
The first column reports the coefficients on retirement using traditional selection on observables models. The second column reports the coefficients on retirement where retirement was estimated using instrumental variables as described in the Empirical Framework section. This sample consisted of continuously insured unionized men ages 55–70. Controls for plant and an age polynomial were included
Effect of retirement on health for all unionized workers, administrative data (1996–2011)
| Coefficient [Standard Error] | Row Mean | SOO | SOO & Risk | IV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | 50 % | 0.0794 | 0.0661 | −0.00174 |
| [0.0441] | [0.0422] | [0.0611] | ||
| Diabetes | 20 % | 0.0844** | 0.0890** | 0.0613 |
| [0.0282] | [0.0325] | [0.0384] | ||
| Asthma | 10 % | 0.0207 | 0.0112 | −0.0405** |
| [0.0119] | [0.0135] | [0.0177] | ||
| Arthritis | 29 % | 0.0839* | 0.0839 | −0.0187 |
| [0.0445] | [0.0542] | [0.0658] | ||
| Major Depression | 4 % | 0.0122 | 0.0161 | 0.00148 |
| [0.0113] | [0.0115] | [0.0180] | ||
| Inpatient Visits | 0.11 | 0.0745*** | 0.0545** | 0.0228 |
| [0.0179] | [0.0207] | [0.123] | ||
| Outpatient Visits | 4.83 | 1.784*** | 1.680*** | 0.746 |
| [0.173] | [0.176] | [0.485] | ||
| N | 1,008 | 1,008 | 706 | 1,008 |
| Excluded Instrument F-Stat | N/A | N/A | 68.22 |
***p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1
Results presented are derived from fourteen independent regression models using administrative data. Disease prevalence outcome variables reflect whether the individual had —this year, or previously—received a diagnosis for this illness, using the algorithm described in the Data section. For inpatient and outpatient visits, the outcome variables were the number of face-to-face, unique visits of that type
The first column presents the row means, or cross-sectional prevalence, in this sample. The second column reports the coefficients on retirement using traditional selection on observables models. The third column reports the coefficients on retirement using traditional selection on observables models, but including a control for risk-score at age 61. The fourth column reports the coefficients on retirement where retirement is estimated using instrumental variables as described in the Empirical Framework section. The sample consisted of unionized men ages 55–70
Standard errors were clustered by country plant. Controls for plant and an age polynomial were included
Number of individuals reporting age first diagnosed, SHARE Survey (2011)
| Age | Hypertension | Cholesterol | Diabetes | Asthma | Arthritis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 49 | 236 | 138 | 65 | 31 | 111 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 51 | 255 | 158 | 88 | 48 | 143 |
| 52 | 412 | 270 | 137 | 40 | 222 |
| 53 | 329 | 216 | 96 | 45 | 151 |
| 54 | 299 | 187 | 121 | 40 | 174 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 56 | 318 | 208 | 139 | 46 | 169 |
| 57 | 320 | 209 | 116 | 47 | 166 |
| 58 | 396 | 253 | 128 | 39 | 228 |
| 59 | 225 | 174 | 93 | 36 | 108 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 61 | 204 | 121 | 73 | 21 | 63 |