Home
Retirement News
Retirement Forum
Introduction

Site Search
Article archives
Submit your article
XML News Feeds
Register
Login
Mailing List
Retirement News
401K
* 401k Articles
* 401k News
* 401k Help
* 401k Forum
Pension Protection Act
ERISA
Retirement Headlines
* Retirement Headline News
IRA
* IRA news
* IRA Rollover
Retirement Planning
* Retirement Planning News
529
* 529 News
Wealth Management
* Wealth Management News
Investment
* Investment News
Roth IRA
Roth 401k
* Guidelines and Rules
* Roth 401k Articles
* Roth 401k News
* Roth 401k Help
* Roth 401k Forum
SEP IRA
* Guidelines and Rules
* SEP IRA Articles
* SEP IRA News
* SEP Help
* SEP IRA Forum
SOLO 401k
* Guidelines and Rules
* Solo 401k Articles
* Solo 401k News
* Solo 401k Help
* Solo 401k Forum
SIMPLE IRA
* Guidelines and Rules
* SIMPLE IRA Articles
* SIMPLE IRA News
* SIMPLE IRA Help
* SIMPLE IRA Forum
 

Retire early - die early

Posted by Randy on: 2005-10-14 07:42:41 in category:
Retirement Headlines [ Print | Permalink / 0 Comment(s) ]



Retire early - die early


The idea of a long, relaxed retirement may appeal to many after a life of hard work, but the results of a new Swedish study show that it might not be such a good idea after all.

A joint project from the Karolinska Institute and Linköping University has revealed that people who retire early are twice as likely to die earlier than the rest of the population. The increased risk affects both men and women, noted Dagens Medicin, which got hold of the unpublished results.

For twelve years researchers have studied almost a quarter of a million people in the county of Östergötland who was aged 16 to 64 in 1984.

They found that the risk of dying early was 2.5 times higher among women who retired early and 2.8 times higher among men who retired early.

Women who were forced into an early pension before the age of 24 run the greatest risk: their chances of dying early are 14 times higher than the average.

The news will disturb the 60% of Swedes who in a recent survey said that they are eager to retire early.

Professor Kristina Alexandersson, who led the project, said she was surprised by the result. She told Dagens Medicin that it is normally muscular and skeletal diagnoses, along with depression, which result in early retirement - conditions which do not normally lead to death.

The precise risk of dying early is unclear.

Researchers offer two explanations. One is that the health factors which result in early retirement are many and complex. Another is that the social isolation of early retirement can have a negative influence on health.






Business open community website
http://www.business-business.biz

Submit articles
http://www.business-business.biz/submitstory.php

Retirement forum
http://www.business-business.biz/forums.php


Retirement open community website
http://www.retirement-retirement.com

Submit articles
http://www.retirement-retirement.com/submitstory.php

Retirement forum
http://www.retirement-retirement.com/forums.php



Investment open community website
http://www.investment-investment.us

Submit articles
http://www.investment-investment.us/submitstory.php

Investment forum
http://www.investment-investment.us/forums.php



Related Stories



Post new Comment



This site does not allow anonymous comments. Registered members can login to participate. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds



 

Site Search

Search for in
Please support our sponsors *

Retirement Planning Made Simple -
Map out your future!


Experience the difference unbiased money management can offer you.....

Recent forum posts:

Solo 401-k

3%?

Hello from the SF area

Puerto Vallarta & Lake Tahoe--The Best of Both Worlds

Looking for the Best Place in the World to Retire?

How Do You Get to Paradise?

What’s Going on South of the Border?

Want to Find Treasure in the Sierra Madres?

fixed index annuities as funding vehicle for solo 401-k

Need advice

About this site
Powered by Esselbach Storyteller CMS System Version 1.8