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Are the Boomers in Worse Shape than Predecessors?Boomers' Aches and Pains May Signal a Decline in Senior Disability |
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March 9, 2007
The research, published in print and online by the nonprofit National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), was supported by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), a component of the National Institutes of Health. Using a summary health index developed for their analysis, the researchers compared the overall, self-reported health of people in three birth-year groups -- those born in 1936-41 (now ages 66 to 71), 1942-47 (now ages 60 to 65) and 1948-53 (now ages 54 to 59). The data came from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationwide, NIA-sponsored survey of more than 20,000 Americans over age 50 that began in 1992. It draws from survey respondents' answers to questions about their health and well-being when they were all between the ages of 51 and 56. The researchers' health index blended HRS participants' ratings of their health, difficulty with physical mobility and agility, and perception of physical pain. The study showed:
This new analysis provides some initial data raising the question of whether today's pre-retirees could reach retirement age in worse shape than their predecessors, with individuals potentially in poorer health than current retirees and possibly increasing health care costs for society. In the past two decades, there has been a dramatic decline in disability among people 65 and older. One recent report of this trend, for example, found that the prevalence of chronic disability among people 65 and older fell from 26.5 percent in 1982 to 19 percent in 2004/2005 Researchers and policymakers are vitally interested in whether this trend will continue, accelerate or decelerate with the retirement of the baby boom, a critically important question in planning for health, housing and other needs of this wave of retirees, who begin to turn 65 in 2011. The NBER report follows earlier analyses, including a NIA-supported study suggesting that the obesity epidemic, which is driving higher rates of diabetes, heart disease and hypertension, could threaten the disability decline as well. It will be important to develop and understand new data about pre-retirees to see which direction the boomer cohort will take, said Richard Suzman, Ph.D., director of the NIA's Behavioral and Social Research Program. Report Your Experience
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