Quote:
Originally Posted by troutman
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/ar...etirement.aspx
Retirement Boosts Your Risk of Depression by 40 Percent
According to a new report released by the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA),1 following an initial boost in health, retirement increases your risk of clinical depression by 40 percent while raising your chances of being diagnosed with a physical condition by 60 percent. It also:
- Reduces your likelihood of being in self-reported excellent or very good health by 40 percent
- Raises your risk of taking medication for a diagnosed physical condition by 60 percent
The study’s author, who called retirement’s impacts on health “drastic,” suggested a later retirement age may actually be preferable, noting: 2 “New research presented in this paper indicates that being retired decreases physical, mental and self-assessed health. The adverse effects increase as the number of years spent in retirement increases.”
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This is the kind of retirement where you do a full stop and then live a life without any further purpose or pursuit of anything in a passionate way. I think those striving to retire in their thirties or forties won't be part of the stats you are quoting.