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April 11 - "Health Shocks"
Diminish Wealth More Later in Life
A new study underscores the need for seniors to maintain
their health in order to maintain their wealth.
Building on a 2003 study that found that healthy seniors
are more likely to retain their savings, Ohio State University
researchers have now discovered that the later in life a serious
illness occurs, the more damage it does to a person's finances.
The study found that when seniors develop a new and serious
health problem--experiencing what the researchers call a "health
shock"--early in retirement, they lose a substantial
portion of their savings immediately. But if they experience
the health shock later in life, they will lose even more.
Study participants older than the age of 70 lost 40% more
of their savings than similar seniors who were just four years
younger. The results appear in a recent issue of the Journal
of Population Economics.
The impact of health problems on seniors' finances has been
studied over the years, but scientists have drawn different
conclusions, in part because they measured health and wealth
in different ways, says Jinkook Lee, PhD, a professor of consumer
sciences at Ohio State.
This study is the first to gather a long-term perspective
on how chronic illness diminishes seniors' wealth over time.
"When someone has a chronic health problem, they tend
to find a way to manage in their daily life, but financially,
the negative effect doesn't go away," Lee says. "If
you develop diabetes, for instance, it costs you for your
entire life."
She and coauthor Hyungsoo Kim, PhD, of the University of
Kentucky, Lexington, have been tracking the health and wealth
of seniors using the broad-based National Institute on Aging's
Asset and Health Dynamics of the Oldest Old (AHEAD) survey.
In a 2003 study of AHEAD data, they found that seniors who
maintain their health are 6% to 7% more likely to retain a
significant portion of their savings compared with those who
suffer from health problems.
This new study compared the long term financial repercussions
of preexisting chronic health problems with those caused by
the sudden onset of a new health problem late in life. Lee
and Kim focused on five common and serious health conditions:
diabetes, cancer, lung disease, heart condition, and stroke.
They examined how the wealth of more than 5,500 AHEAD participants
changed between 1995 and 2002. All were aged 70 or older at
the start of the study.
When participants developed a new and serious health condition,
the researchers categorized those incidents as a health shock.
The later in life that health shocks occurred, the more they
diminished a person's wealth, the researchers found. In 1998,
participants who had recently experienced a health shock lost
an average of 5.5% of their overall wealth as a result. But
when they were two years older, the average loss for a health
shock was 8.7% of wealth.
When they were four years older (in 2002), it was 9.5%--40%
more than when the participants were first studied in 1998.
"If you have a chronic health condition, it diminishes
your wealth throughout your life. And if you get a health
shock, it diminishes your wealth even more," Lee says.
"Though over time the costs associated with that shock
may decrease, that illness will still deflate your wealth
continuously thereafter."
To Lee, this research demonstrates how costly healthcare
is to Americans, even if they have Medicare coverage. Medicare
typically pays a little more than one half of someone's medical
bills, and seniors--most of whom are living on a fixed income--are
forced to make up the difference by dipping into their savings.
Add to that the fact that Americans are living longer, and
the cost of healthcare keeps increasing.
Even if seniors can recover physically from a health shock,
they can't recover financially. "If we have some kind
of health shock during our working years, maybe we are lucky
and we have good health insurance from our job, or maybe we
can go out and get a second job or try to work longer hours
to make up the cost. But seniors are past the age when they
can do that," Lee says.
The lesson, she said, is that even average Americans need
to give serious thought to the healthcare system and plan
for their retirement with healthcare costs in mind. People
with chronic diseases in their family history can talk to
their doctor to learn about the likelihood of developing these
diseases themselves. And then they can try to make better
estimates of what their healthcare costs will be after they
retire. They can also try to live healthier lives with the
goal of staving off these diseases.
As part of her continuing research, Lee is traveling around
the world to examine how different healthcare systems impact
people's wealth. She is focusing on how universal healthcare
systems, such as those in France and Canada--and now, even
in developing countries like Korea--are easing the burden
of citizens' healthcare costs.
Source: Ohio State University
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