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Study Finds Youngest Boomers Having More Health Problems

March 7, 2007
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The earliest baby boomers seem to be approaching retirement age with more health problems, pain, and drinking and psychiatric problems than reported by people at the same age a dozen years earlier, a new federally sponsored survey finds.

The report was published this week by the nonprofit National Bureau of Economic Research. It raises some doubts about whether reduced disability in old age seen over the past two decades will continue as boomers pass the 65 milestone.

“Our findings certainly run counter to the prevailing expectations of generally good health in old age, the idea that we’ll all be running marathons when we’re 100 and drop dead unexpectedly,” said Beth Soldo, a sociologist and director of the Population Aging Research Center at the University of Pennsylvania and lead author of the report.

Only about half of those born between 1948 and 1953 rated their health as “excellent” or “very good” when they were surveyed in 2004 (at age 51 to 56). By contrast, about 57 percent of those born between 1936 and 1941 felt they had above-average health at the same age.

Dr. Soldo said that a middle group in the survey – those born between 1942 and 1947 – seems to see health problems much the same as the early boomers. Each survey group was drawn from a sample of more than 20,000 Americans older than 50, with the tracking beginning in 1992.

The differences between the youngest group and the oldest group was the most striking in terms of pain, chronic illness, drinking and psychiatric problems. For instance, men in the early boomer group were three times more likely to report psychiatric problems than the oldest group, and women were more than twice as likely to report such problems.

Compared with the oldest group, the youngest group was more likely to report problems with daily activities such as walking, climbing stairs, kneeling or crouching or getting up from a chair.

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