A Mixed-Methods Examination of Lost Occupational Choice in Retirement

Author:

Voss Maren Wright1ORCID,Richards Lorie Gage2,Price Pollie2,Terrill Alexandra2,Wadsworth Lori3,Hung Man4

Affiliation:

1. Utah State University, Salt Lake City, USA

2. The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA

3. Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, USA

4. Roseman University of Health Sciences, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

Abstract

Lost work opportunity and forced retirement demonstrate negative health impacts related to occupational deprivation. Measuring occupational loss during the retirement transition can be problematic. The objective of the study is to clarify measurement of involuntary retirement in its relationship to occupational loss and deprivation. Using an explanatory sequential mixed-methods design, survey data on unemployment, forced retirement, and earlier-than-planned retirement from 195 screened retirees yielded 102 reporting at least one lost work opportunity event, with 18 interviewed about occupational loss within the analytic timeframe. Planned retirement age was similar for full-employment and lost work opportunity groups. Actual retirement age was earlier in the lost work opportunity sample (age 57.5 compared with 61.2). Interviews identified a 22% discrepancy between forced retirement reported in survey versus interview data. Themes emerging from the interviews indicated financial and identity challenges from lost work opportunity, a dialectical trade-off between lost opportunity and daily freedom, and overall resilience.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference41 articles.

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4. Does retirement trigger ill health?

5. Precarious Employment: Understanding an Emerging Social Determinant of Health

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