Long-Term Services And Supports Needed By Retirees
The goal of a three-part series of briefs from the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College is to help retirees, their families, and policymakers better understand the likelihood that 65-year-olds, over the course of their retirement, will experience disability that seems manageable, catastrophic, or somewhere in-between. The initial brief in June 2021 begins by describing the risk of needing different levels of support during retirement. The first section introduces the analysis. The second section explains the methodology, including how support needs are measured and classified. The third section describes the results: about one-fifth of retirees will need no support and one-quarter are likely to experience the type of severe needs that most patients dread. In between these two extremes, 22% will have low needs and 38% will have moderate needs. The brief can be obtained here.
The second brief in the series was released in September 2021. It explores the extent to which retirees’ financial and non-financial resources together could meet different levels of care needs. The first section provides an overview of the types of care older adults typically receive. The second section explains the methodology for estimating the support that various family members and financial resources can provide. The third section describes the results, and reports that, at age 65, only about one-fifth of retirees have the family and financial resources to cover high intensity care for at least three years and about one third do not have any resources at all. The second brief can be obtained here.
Journals Of Gerontology Scientific Articles On COVID-19
The Gerontological Society of America's highly cited, peer-reviewed journals are continuing to publish scientific articles on COVID-19. The following were published between August 16 and September 21, 2021 in the Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences:
COVID-19-Related Worries, Disruptions, And Depressive Symptoms Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults With Disabilities: What Makes The Difference? which discusses how the results supported the claim that the associations between COVID-19-related social disruptions and depressive symptoms can vary over time.
Physical Disability And Older Adults’ Perceived Food And Economic Insecurity During The COVID- 19 Pandemic, which discusses how older adults with more functional limitations were vulnerable to economic and food insecurity during the pandemic.
Changes In Older Adults’ Social Contact During The COVID-19 Pandemic, which discusses the importance of ensuring that communication technologies to maintain social ties are available to and usable by older adults, particularly for those living in residential care settings.
A National Study Of Racial-Ethnic Disparities In COVID-19 Concerns Among Older Americans: Evidence From The Health And Retirement Study, which discusses how more research and policy interventions are needed to lessen the disproportionate burden of COVID-19 experienced by older adults of racial-ethnic minority groups.