4.5 Article

Association of perceived job security and chronic health conditions with retirement in older UK and US workers

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
卷 32, 期 1, 页码 52-58

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckab170

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  1. Medical Research Council and Chief Scientist Office [MC_UU_00022/2, SPHSU17]

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The study found that job insecurity and chronic health conditions have different effects on retirement decisions among older workers in the UK and the USA. Job insecurity was associated with retirement in the UK cohort, while chronic health conditions had a more significant impact on retirement factors in the UK cohort compared to the US cohort.
Background The relationship between job insecurity, chronic health conditions (CHCs) and retirement among older workers are likely to differ between countries that have different labor markets and health and social safety nets. To date, there are no epidemiological studies that have prospectively assessed the role of job insecurity in retirement incidence, while accounting for CHC trajectories in two countries with different welfare systems. We investigated the strength of the association between baseline job insecurity and retirement incidence over an 11-year period while accounting for CHC trajectories, among workers 50-55 years of age at baseline in the UK and USA. Methods We performed Cox proportional hazards regression analysis, using 2006-2016 data from the Health and Retirement Study (US cohort, n = 570) and English Longitudinal Study on Aging (UK cohort n = 1052). Results Job insecurity was associated with retirement after adjusting for CHC trajectories (HR = 0.69, 95% CI = 0.50-0.95) in the UK cohort only. CHC trajectories were associated with retirement in both cohorts; however, this association was attenuated in the US cohort, but remained significant for the medium-increasing trajectory in the UK cohort (HR = 1.41, 95% CI = 1.01-1.97) after adjustment for all covariates. Full adjustment for relevant covariates attenuated the association between job insecurity and retirement indicating that CHCs, social and health factors are contributing mechanistic factors underpinning retirement incidence. Conclusions The observed differences in the two cohorts may be driven by macro-level factors operating latently, which may affect the work environment, health outcomes and retirement decisions uniquely in different settings.

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