A Multilevel Dyadic Study of the Impact of Retirement on Self-Rated Health: Does Retirement Predict Worse Health in Married Couples?

TitleA Multilevel Dyadic Study of the Impact of Retirement on Self-Rated Health: Does Retirement Predict Worse Health in Married Couples?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsCurl, AL, Townsend, AL
JournalResearch on Aging
Volume36
Issue3
Pagination297-321
KeywordsAdult children, Demographics, Health Conditions and Status, Healthcare, Methodology, Retirement Planning and Satisfaction
Abstract

Objectives: This study examined the effects of retirement on self-rated health for married couples, using interdependence and social stratification theoretical frameworks. Method: Dyadic multilevel modeling of data (N = 2,213 non- Hispanic couples) from 1992 to 2010 of the Health and Retirement Survey. Results: Retirement was associated with worse self-ratings of health (SRH) short term (ST) for both husbands and wives during the first couple of years of retirement. In addition, the longer the husbands (but not wives) were retired, the worse was their SRH. Cross-spouse effects varied by gender: When wives retired, their husbands SRH improved ST, but when husbands retired their wives SRH improved long term. Spouse education moderated the relationship between years since spouses retirement and SRH for wives. Discussion: Practitioners can use this information to help married couples through retirement planning and transitions. Results suggest that models of retirement in couples should pay greater attention to gender and other social stratification factors, spousal interdependence, and length of time since retirement.

Notes

Date revised - 2014-12-01 Number of references - 58

DOI10.1177/0164027513486900
Endnote Keywords

Gerontology/GERIATRICS/retirement planning/married couples/socioeconomic status/self-rated health/longitudinal analysis

Endnote ID

999999

Citation Key8014