Iran Daily

Losing life savings in middle age increases risk of early death

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Money may not be able to buy happiness, but a new study suggested it does buy health. Researcher­s in the US discovered that people who lost at least 75 percent of their nest eggs in middle or older age, were 50 percent more likely to die in the next 20 years, according to telegraph.co.uk.

The researcher­s say the ¿nancial loss takes a heavy toll on physical and mental health.

Lead author Dr. Lindsay Pool, a research assistant professor of preventive medicine at Northweste­rn University Feinberg School of Medicine, said, “We found losing your life-savings has a profound effect on person’s long-term health.

“It’s a very pervasive issue. It wasn’t just a few individual­s but more than 25 percent of Americans had a wealth shock over the 20 years of the study.”

The study, which is published in the journal Jama, is the ¿rst to look at the long-term effects of a large ¿nancial loss.

Author Carlos Mendes de Leon, professor of epidemiolo­gy and global public health at University of Michigan’s School of Public Health, said, “Our ¿ndings offer new evidence for a potentiall­y important social determinan­t of health that so far has not been recognized: sudden loss of wealth in late middle or older age.”

The study also examined a group of low-income people who did not have any accumulate­d wealth and were considered socially vulnerable in terms of their health. Their increased risk of mortality over 20 years was 67 percent.

Pool, a board certi¿ed in cardiovasc­ular disease, said, “The most surprising ¿nding was that having wealth and losing it is almost as bad for your life expectancy as never having wealth.”

The study looked at longitudin­al data from the Health and Retirement Study which was started by the National Institute on Aging in 1992, and has been following 8,000 participan­ts ever since, monitoring health and wellbeing.

The team had already shown that ¿nancial stress, such as the global recession, causes short term depression high blood pressure and other markers of ill health.

But the new ¿ndings show that ¿nancial loss also has devastatin­g long term implicatio­ns.

Pool said, “This shows clinicians need to have an awareness of their patients’ ¿nancial circumstan­ces.

“It’s something they need to ask about to understand if their patients may be at an increased health risk.”

The team is now planning to investigat­e the mechanisms that lead to higher mortality after a big ¿nancial loss.

She said, “Why are people dying, and can we intervene at some point in a way that might reverse the course of that increased risk?”

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