The Moderating Effect of Labor Force Participation on the Prevalence of Depression Among Older Adults
Antonia Diaz-Valdes, Jose Medina, Esteban Calvo, Nicolas Montalva

TL;DR
This study explores how labor force participation affects depression rates in older adults, finding that working may lower depression risk.
Contribution
The study identifies labor force status as a moderator of depression prevalence among older adults across 35 countries.
Findings
The average predicted probability of depression was 22.00% for males and 33.62% for females.
Working older adults had lower depression probabilities compared to retired individuals.
Women are disproportionately affected by depression regardless of labor force status.
Abstract
Depression among older adults is one of the most pressing issues in public health, yetis one of the less recognized problems and is one of the leading causes of disability. This study aims to examine cross-national gender gaps in the prevalence of depression risk from 2000 to 2020, controlling for age and cohort effects, and exploring labor force status as moderator. A random-effects model with robust standard errors was conducted to examine depression cases and predict probabilities. Our analysis involved a sample of 246,000 individuals aged 50 and older from 35 countries with at least 2 waves of reported measures, spanning the years 2000-2020. We used cut-points for risk of depression based on the depression scales used in the different surveys – Health and Retirement Study and sister datasets around the world. The average predicted probability of depression was 22.00 % for males and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWorkplace Health and Well-being · Health disparities and outcomes · Mental Health Treatment and Access
