Abrams Leah R, Clarke Philippa J, Mehta Neil K
Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2022 Mar 3;77(3):615-625. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbab113.
Exiting the labor force earlier or later than planned is common, with predictable economic consequences. However, the mental health ramifications of such off-time events are not known but are important to promoting well-being in retirement.
Using the Health and Retirement Study (1992-2016), we created 6 groups based on the alignment of expectations about full-time work at age 62 (reported at ages 51-61) with realized labor force status after reaching age 62 (N = 10,421). Negative binomial models estimated the adjusted association between unmet expectations about work and depressive symptoms.
Unexpectedly not working was associated with higher depressive symptoms than working as expected after adjusting for sociodemographic, economic, and health factors at the time of expectations (incidence rate ratio = 1.35, 95% confidence interval: 1.17-1.56). Additionally, adjusting for health declines and marriage dissolution between expectations and age 62 partially attenuated the association, but unexpectedly not working remained significantly associated with a 1.16 increase in the incidence rate of depressive symptoms. Unexpectedly working at 62 was not associated with depressive symptoms. Race/ethnicity interacted with expectation alignment (F(15,42) = 2.44, p = .0118) in that Hispanic respondents experienced an increase in depressive symptoms when working after unmet and unsure expectations compared to met expectations, whereas White respondents did not.
Unlike working longer than expected, unexpectedly not working at age 62 was associated with depressive symptoms, even after accounting for health declines. Public and employer policies should assist workers in remaining in the labor force as long as planned and offer mental health supports for unexpected work exits.
比计划提前或推迟退出劳动力市场的情况很常见,会产生可预测的经济后果。然而,此类不合时宜事件对心理健康的影响尚不清楚,但对于促进退休后的幸福感很重要。
利用健康与退休研究(1992 - 2016年),我们根据62岁时(在51 - 61岁时报告)对全职工作的期望与62岁后实际劳动力状况的匹配情况创建了6组(N = 10421)。负二项式模型估计了未实现的工作期望与抑郁症状之间的调整后关联。
在校正期望时的社会人口统计学、经济和健康因素后,意外不工作比按预期工作与更高的抑郁症状相关(发病率比 = 1.35,95%置信区间:1.17 - 1.56)。此外,校正期望与62岁之间的健康状况下降和婚姻解体后,这种关联部分减弱,但意外不工作仍然与抑郁症状发病率增加1.16显著相关。62岁时意外工作与抑郁症状无关。种族/族裔与期望匹配存在交互作用(F(15,42) = 2.44,p = 0.0118),即与实现期望相比,西班牙裔受访者在未实现和不确定期望后工作时抑郁症状增加,而白人受访者则没有。
与工作时间比预期长不同,62岁时意外不工作与抑郁症状相关,即使在考虑健康状况下降之后也是如此。公共政策和雇主政策应帮助工人按计划尽可能长时间留在劳动力市场,并为意外退出工作提供心理健康支持。