Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T20:55:58.537Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gender differences in the mechanism of involuntary retirement affecting loneliness through vulnerability and coping resources

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 June 2022

Oejin Shin
Affiliation:
School of Social Work at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA
Sojung Park
Affiliation:
Brown School of Social Work at Washington University, Saint Louis, Missouri, USA
Hyunjoo Lee*
Affiliation:
Department of Social Welfare at Daegu University, Gyeongsan-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do, Republic of Korea
Ji Young Kang
Affiliation:
Department of Social Welfare at Chungnam National University, Daejeon, Republic of Korea
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Involuntary retirement is associated with diminished mental health. However, little is known about the mechanism that connects involuntary retirees' coping resources to their loneliness. Gender patterns in the mechanism of involuntary retirement are also unclear. This study examines gender differences in the link between involuntary retirement and loneliness through secondary stressors (material and physical vulnerability) and coping resources (social support and self-efficacy). Two-step structural equation modelling was used to examine the effects of several mediators. For both men and women, involuntary retirement was associated with increased loneliness in terms of physical vulnerability and social efficacy. We found the female involuntary retirees are facing loneliness with multiple mediating factors. The layers of experiencing loneliness among female retirees are (a) directly from involuntary retirement; (b) indirectly from involuntary retirement and secondary stressors (material vulnerability and physical vulnerability); and (c) indirectly from involuntary retirement, secondary stressors (material vulnerability and physical vulnerability) and coping resources. The specific gender differences in the complex mechanism leading to later-year loneliness among the retirees may inform the interventions and policies that mitigate the disadvantages among involuntarily retired older adults in the United States of America.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

As Americans are living longer and remain healthier than they did in previous generations, more scholars are interested in their wellbeing in retirement (Mather et al., Reference Mather, Jacobsen and Pollard2015). While most older adults report satisfaction with improved health outcomes and lower stress levels that accompany retirement (Denier et al., Reference Denier, Clouston, Richards and Hofer2017), some studies find retirees report poorer health, higher depression and reduced wellbeing – especially among the involuntarily retired (Rhee et al., Reference Rhee, Mor Barak and Gallo2016).

Focusing on the nature of retirement (voluntary/involuntary), this study explores complex wellbeing mechanisms among retirees. Despite the negative mental health effects of involuntary retirement, understanding of the mechanism underlying the path to low wellbeing remains unclear. Specifically, little is known about the mechanisms behind the multiple mediation of involuntary retirement and wellbeing. Considering the gendered pattern of preretirement employment histories and other life experiences, it is important to examine if and to what extent the paths to loneliness differ between men and women. Women, for example, may be more vulnerable than men to retirement and therefore to material and non-material disadvantages (Cahill et al., Reference Cahill, Giandrea and Quinn2013; Hershey and Henkens, Reference Hershey and Henkens2013).

Guided by process theory, we examined links between a primary stressor (involuntary retirement), secondary stressors (material and physical vulnerability), coping resources (social support, health efficacy, social efficacy and financial efficacy) and outcome (loneliness) among male and female involuntary retirees (Figure 1). We focused on retirees' loneliness given its strong effect on late-life morbidity and mortality (Steptoe et al., Reference Steptoe, Shankar, Demakakos and Wardle2013; Holt-Lunstad et al., Reference Holt-Lunstad, Smith, Baker, Harris and Stephenson2015; Rico-Uribe et al., Reference Rico-Uribe, Caballero, Martín-María, Cabello, Ayuso-Mateos and Miret2018).

Figure 1. Theoretical framework.

Note: The letters ‘A' to ‘H' indicate the possible direct and indirect paths in this model.

Theoretical framework

Stress process theory was adopted to guide our exploration of gender differences in the complex mechanism linking from involuntary retirement to loneliness. Stress process theory (Pearlin and Skaff, Reference Pearlin and Skaff1996) provides an interpretive framework illustrating how individuals exposed to identical stressors may be affected in different ways. Variability may emerge as some encounter primary (involuntary retirement) and secondary stressors (material and physical vulnerabilities), leading to poor mental health outcomes like loneliness. Differences also stem from variable coping resources like social support and self-efficacy, which mitigate harmful stressor outcomes (Avison, Reference Avison, Shanahan, Mortimer and Johnson2016). Stress process theory postulates a potential role for secondary stressors (here, material and physical vulnerability) that reinforce adverse effects of primary stressors (involuntary retirement). It also highlights the importance of coping resources (social support, health efficacy, social efficacy and financial efficacy), which may be distributed unequally among involuntary retirees and affect levels of loneliness.

The secondary stressors of two vulnerabilities can be considered a result of the embodied social and institutional context, which has a multivalent concept and negative impact on the individual (Boni-Saenz, Reference Boni-Saenz2020). The concept of vulnerability explains that the degree to which an individual is vulnerable is shaped by inequalities in ageing (Schröder-Butterfill and Marianti, Reference Schröder-Butterfill and Marianti2006). Although most people are at risk of reduced income with age, only some experience poverty. Those who contributed to a pension during their working life and retired voluntarily are much less exposed to a dramatic fall in their finances than those who mostly worked in part-time, insecure or informal employment and had involuntary retirement (Gunnarsson, Reference Gunnarsson2002; Lambert et al., Reference Lambert, Henly and Kim2019).

Even among those who experience income loss and involuntary retirement, not all experience poverty, as they may have coping strategies, including greater social support or self-efficacy. In this context, the vulnerability concept can explain the complexities and ambiguities found in real life, based on the different exposures, threats and coping resources of the individual (Schröder-Butterfill and Marianti, Reference Schröder-Butterfill and Marianti2006). As women have fewer opportunities to gain necessary skills for success than men, they may have less self-efficacy (West et al., Reference West, Welch and Knabb2002).

Involuntary retirement and loneliness

Later-life loneliness is a major risk factor for mortality and morbidity (Steptoe et al., Reference Steptoe, Shankar, Demakakos and Wardle2013). In the United States of America (USA), an estimated 25–29 per cent of American adults aged 70 and older are lonely (Ong et al., Reference Ong, Uchino and Wethington2016). Being single, living alone, and having poorer physical and mental health are risk factors (Zebhauser et al., Reference Zebhauser, Baumert, Emeny, Ronel, Peters and Ladwig2015); while increased age and higher education are protective factors. Older adults are less distressed with the difficulty of the interpersonal relationship because they have less expectation with social relationship than young adults (Nikitin and Freund, Reference Nikitin and Freund2018).

Involuntary retirement refers to a retirement transition with a lack of control over decision making with the transition perceived as forced rather than wanted (Szinovacz and Davey, Reference Szinovacz and Davey2005). Involuntary retirement has negative outcomes on late-life mental health, as unanticipated retirement reduces a sense of personal control (Calvo et al., Reference Calvo, Haverstick and Sass2009). Evidence indicates that people who are forced to retire are at risk of long-lasting negative effects on their physical and mental health (Rhee et al., Reference Rhee, Mor Barak and Gallo2016). Especially, involuntary retirement is known to be closely related to race/ethnicity and gender. For example, Black women were more likely than White women to view their retirement as forced, which might be due to poor health (Szinovacz and Davey, Reference Szinovacz and Davey2005).

Although a substantial amount of research has been conducted on the negative effect of involuntary retirement on physical and mental health (Van Solinge, Reference Van Solinge2007; Dingemans and Henkens, Reference Dingemans and Henkens2014; Rhee et al., Reference Rhee, Mor Barak and Gallo2016), little research has examined loneliness associated with involuntary retirement. One recent study (Shin, et al., Reference Shin, Park, Amano, Kwon and Kim2020). found that loneliness differed by the nature of retirement and that involuntary retirees reported more loneliness than voluntary retirees. However, the literature has yet to consider the role of the secondary stressor and coping resources in conditioning the relationship between involuntary retirement and loneliness.

In addition, gender is a crucial contextual aspect impacting retirement transition since women and men have distinct workplace attachments (Schulz and Binstock, Reference Schulz and Binstock2008). In general, women have a higher proportion of irregular work and earn lower wages due to marriage or child-care duties (Moen, Reference Moen1992; Blau and Winkler, Reference Blau and Winkler2017). Although women's participation has increased recently (Bishu and Headley, Reference Bishu and Headley2020), we would expect that men and women might have different experiences in terms of their mental health following involuntary retirements due to the difference in their employment history. The polarised economic condition between genders causes more mental health problems like depression with women's involuntary retirement transition (Park and Kang, Reference Park and Kang2016).

Material and physical vulnerability

Vulnerability – exposure to and difficulty coping with stress – is widely used in research and practice to understand age-related frailty (Virokannas et al., Reference Virokannas, Liuski and Kuronen2020). Understanding later-year vulnerability may be challenging. The ageing process involves physical declines and changes in the relationship between individual factors and environmental influences in the material, physical, social and psychological domains (Grundy, Reference Grundy2006).

Like earlier studies (Bertoni et al., Reference Bertoni, Maggi and Weber2018; Carr et al., Reference Carr, Moen, Perry Jenkins and Smyer2018), we focused on material difficulties and health problems as major later-year vulnerabilities. Retirees' material and health vulnerability is increasingly important given longer life expectancy and accompanying health-care costs correlated to increased disability in ageing and economic insecurity in retirement (Ellis et al., Reference Ellis, Munnell and Eschtruth2014).

The abrupt, unplanned nature of involuntary retirement can cause financial difficulty and lead to poor mental and physical health (Rhee et al., Reference Rhee, Mor Barak and Gallo2016). Since most retirees are at risk of reduced income, sufficient pre-retirement financial resources are essential to post-retirement economic security (Schröder-Butterfill and Marianti, Reference Schröder-Butterfill and Marianti2006). Thus, involuntary retirees may face higher material vulnerability – unmet needs related to health-care, food and housing costs. Levy (Reference Levy2009) analysed the determinants of material hardships among adults aged 65 and older and found that 10 per cent of the sample reported material hardship (food or medications) at least once in 2006. Brown et al. (Reference Brown, Dynan and Figinski2019) explored the likely prevalence of material hardship in old age for individuals nearing retirement using a cohort analysis. Results showed that the more recent cohort is likely to have higher economic insecurity, particularly men.

Health vulnerability is key to life quality in ageing (Grundy, Reference Grundy2006). The number of chronic diseases, activities of daily living (ADLs) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) are widely used to assess older adults' health vulnerability (Hajek and König, Reference Hajek and König2016). Although there is conflicting evidence of how retirement affects physical health (van der Heide et al., Reference van der Heide, van Rijn, Robroek, Burdorf and Proper2013), involuntary retirees are more likely to perceive post-retirement health declines compared to voluntary retirees. Involuntary retirees report poorer health conditions, more illnesses (Swan et al., Reference Swan, Dame and Carmelli1991) and more unhealthy behaviours than voluntary retirees (Henkens et al., Reference Henkens, van Solinge and Gallo2008).

Older adults' material and health vulnerability differs by gender. Women aged 65 and older have greater risks of material vulnerability due to lower average income and higher rates of living alone (Kang and Chung, Reference Kang and Chung2017). In addition, older women are more at risk of disability in later life and live with functional limitations for longer periods (Carmel, Reference Carmel2019). These factors imply high risk for material and physical vulnerability among involuntarily retired females.

Coping resources

Social support

Social support, resources available within a social network, is an important determinant of later-life loneliness (Liu et al., Reference Liu, Gou and Zuo2016). It has received significant attention for its mediating role in the relationship between life stress and mental health. Xie et al. (Reference Xie, Peng, Yang, Zhang, Sun, Wu and Su2018) found that social support mediated the relationship between ADLs and depressive symptoms among older adults in China. Blanch (Reference Blanch2016) examined how social support mediates the relationship between perceived job control (skill utilisation and decision authority) and psychological stress among workers in Spain. Results suggest that effects of job control on working stress were fully mediated by social support from co-workers and supervisors.

Social support is more important, and higher, for women than for men (Rupert et al., Reference Rupert, Stevanovic, Hartman, Bryant and Miller2012). Furthermore, women have a stronger affiliation style than men, cultivating more attachments and wider social networks, since they require greater social support to maintain psychological health (Soman et al., Reference Soman, Bhat, Latha and Praharaj2016). To date, there has been scant research identifying how involuntary retirement contributes to loneliness in older adults.

Self-efficacy

Self-efficacy, a stable sense of personal competence to deal with stressful situations, is a strong predictor of loneliness (Fry and Debats, Reference Fry and Debats2002). Since self-efficacy underlies the motivational commitment to life satisfaction, its absence may enhance perceptions of impediments as insurmountable, thereby intensifying a sense of loneliness (Bandura, Reference Bandura1997). Perceptions of environmental control are linked closely to perceived self-efficacy (Welch and West, Reference Welch and West1995).

Empirical studies consistently show the mediating role of self-efficacy in the relationship between life stress and mental health. For example, in the USA, Maciejewski et al. (Reference Maciejewski, Prigerson and Mazure2000) found that self-efficacy mediates approximately 40 per cent of the effect of stressful life events on depression among people who had previously been depressed. Schönfeld et al. (Reference Schönfeld, Brailovskaia, Bieda, Zhang and Margraf2016) examined the mediating role of self-efficacy in the relationship between daily stress and mental health in Germany, Russia and China. Findings indicated that in all samples, self-efficacy mediates effects of daily stressors on mental health.

Recent discussions of the components of self-efficacy suggest that self-efficacy has both global- and domain-specific features. Global self-efficacy is the belief in one's core competence to cope with stressful or challenging demands; domain-specific self-efficacy is limited to a particular task (Grether et al., Reference Grether, Sowislo and Wiese2018). Our choice of a domain-specific self-efficacy which may contribute to loneliness in later life is based on the previous research in self-efficacy.

Health efficacy, self-assurance in caring for one's own health, is a significant mediator in ageing (Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Mitchell, Johnson-Lawrence, Watkins and Modlin2017).

Social efficacy refers to the perceived capabilities to develop and maintain social relationships and to manage socially stressful conditions (Bandura et al., Reference Bandura, Caprara, Barbaranelli, Gerbino and Pastorelli2003). Social efficacy is known as an important mediator on the psychosocial outcomes (Caprara et al., Reference Caprara, Regalia and Bandura2002). For example, Fiori et al. (Reference Fiori, McIlvane, Brown and Antonucci2006) studied general and social efficacy as mediators of the association between social relations and depressive symptom of middle-aged (35–59) and older adults (60+). The result showed social efficacy partially mediated the association between social relations and depressive symptoms only among older adults while general self-efficacy partially mediated the association only for middle-aged adults. This result implies the importance of social efficacy as a mediator for the relationship between stressor and outcomes among the older adult population.

Financial efficacy, the perceived ability to perform economic or financial tasks, influences one's ability to improve financial decisions and behaviours. Financial efficacy's mediating role shapes the relationship between objective financial knowledge and saving behaviour among low-income families in Canada (Rothwell et al., Reference Rothwell, Khan and Cherney2015).

Gender differences in self-efficacy are based on social expectations and personal accomplishment (Bandura, Reference Bandura1997). Lack of opportunity to practise particular skills can be related to gender stereotypes pertaining to abilities and career choices (Bandura, Reference Bandura1997). Women would be associated with lower self-efficacy than men because they have fewer opportunities or resources for success (West et al., Reference West, Welch and Knabb2002). Overall, low self-efficacy in mental and physical skills could be prevalent among women (Doba et al., Reference Doba, Tokuda, Saiki, Kushiro, Hirano, Matsubara and Hinohara2016). However, research on self-efficacy, particularly domain-specific efficacy, and gendered experience as mediator among involuntary retirees has been lacking.

In sum, studies support possible relationships between involuntary retirement and loneliness through mediating variables: vulnerabilities, external coping resources and internal coping resources. No study has investigated gender differences in the mechanism from involuntary retirement to loneliness through secondary stressors and coping resources. However, gender differences might play a role since an explanatory mechanism regarding involuntary retirement's influence on loneliness might have different effects on men and women.

The present study

Using stress process theory, this study assumed the gender differences of direct and indirect mechanisms from involuntary retirement to loneliness through vulnerabilities (material, physical), external coping resources (social support) and internal coping resources (health efficacy, social efficacy, financial efficacy). We structured our research questions as follows:

  • RQ1: Is involuntary retirement directly associated with loneliness?

  • Hypothesis: Based on previous empirical research, we expect involuntary retirement to be directly associated with the high level of loneliness (Mechanism A).

  • RQ2: To what extent is the mechanism between involuntary retirement and loneliness mediated by vulnerability (material, physical) and coping resources (social support, health efficacy, social efficacy, financial efficacy).

  • Hypothesis: We expect involuntary retirement to be associated with high levels of vulnerability (material, physical) (Mechanisms B, C) and low levels of coping resources (social support, health efficacy, social efficacy, financial efficacy) (Mechanisms E, F, H), leading to high levels of loneliness (Mechanisms D, G, H).

  • RQ3: How do these mechanisms differ depending on gender (male, female)?

  • Hypothesis: We expect there are differences between men and women in these mechanisms.

Method

Data

Data came from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), which is a nationally representative longitudinal ageing study that biennially surveys more than 37,000 adults aged 50 years and older and their spouses/partners in the USA (Sonnega et al., Reference Sonnega, Faul, Ofstedal, Langa, Phillips and Weir2014). We used data samples from respondents completing the psychosocial questionnaires in 2014 (N = 7,435). We excluded proxy respondents (N = 148), those 64 or younger (N = 3,065), those whose family members did not respond (N = 1,227) and partially retired respondents (N = 908). Our final sample was composed of 2,087 individuals. We conducted multiple imputation to address missing cases of social support (N = 26) and loneliness (N = 57). Since 65 is the age of full pension eligibility in the USA, our sample drew on adults aged 65 and older following the previous literature (Kim and Waldorf, Reference Kim, Waldorf and Franklin2019). Fifty-two per cent of older adults aged 65 and older relied on Social Security benefits for at least half of their family income, and 25 per cent of adults aged 65 and older were receiving 90 per cent or more of their family income from Social Security benefits in 2014 (Dushi et al., Reference Dushi, Iams and Trenkamp2017).

Measurements

Loneliness

Loneliness was measured with 11 questions from the revised UCLA Loneliness Scale. Sample questions were: ‘How much of the time do you feel (a) you lack companionship, (b) left out, (c) isolated from others, (d) ‘in tune’ with the people around you, (e) alone, (f) you have people you can talk to?’ Respondents scored their answers on a three-point scale (1 = often, 2 = some of the time, 3 = hardly ever and never). Four questions were reverse-coded and the average score ranged from 1 to 3. A higher score represents more loneliness.

Nature of retirement

Respondents who self-identified as fully retired were selected for the sample. They were asked: ‘Thinking back to the time you retired, was that something you wanted to do or something you felt forced into?’ This question was used to categorise the sample. Wanted was coded voluntary retirement; forced into was coded involuntary retirement. Since this question was asked only of respondents who retired in the current wave, we merged the ‘nature of retirement’ responses from earlier waves with ‘nature of retirement’ responses in 2014.

Material vulnerability

Following the literature, material vulnerability is measured with three domains of health care, housing and food vulnerability (Alley et al., Reference Alley, Soldo, Pagán, McCabe, DeBlois, Field, Asch and Cannuscio2009). Health-care vulnerability was assessed in two items. First, we identified participants with a high ratio of out-of-pocket health spending to income. Those with household incomes of less than 200 per cent of the federal poverty line were underinsured if out-of-pocket expenditures exceeded 5 per cent of household income (Schoen et al., Reference Schoen, Doty, Collins and Holmgren2005). Higher-income participants were underinsured if out-of-pocket expenditures exceeded 10 per cent of household income. Out-of-pocket health expenditures are not covered by insurance (e.g. hospital, nursing home, doctor visits, dentist, outpatient surgery, monthly prescription drugs, home health care and special facilities). We classified participants as foregoing medications if they reported taking less medication than two years ago due to cost. We summed the two items and binary coded them as 1 if the score was 1 or over and 0 if the score was 0 with material vulnerability.

Housing vulnerability was assessed with four items. Participants who identified as renters are considered materially vulnerable; the literature shows that renters have poorer health than home-owners due to inferior housing conditions and neighbourhood environment (Baker et al., Reference Baker, Pham, Daniel and Bentley2020; Sung and Qiu, Reference Sung and Qiu2020). Participants who reported fair or poor-quality housing conditions were identified as housing vulnerable. Participants whose housing costs 30 per cent or more of monthly household income are housing vulnerable. Participants who reported fair or poor neighbourhood safety are housing vulnerable. We summed the four items and binary coded as 1 if the score is 1 or over and 0 if there is no reported housing vulnerability. As a final step, we created the material vulnerability measure by reporting health care, food and housing vulnerability on a scale of 0–3.

Food vulnerability was assessed with two items. Participants who answered no to the question, ‘In the last two years, have you always had enough money to buy the food you need?’ were food insufficient. Those who reported anyone in the household received government food stamps at any time during the past two years were recipients of public welfare. We summed the two items and binary coded them as 1 if the score was 1 or over and 0 if there was 0 score with food vulnerability.

Physical vulnerability

Physical vulnerability was assessed in three domains: number of chronic diseases, ADLs and IADLs. All participants were asked whether a physician had diagnosed them with any of a series of chronic health conditions (0–8) (e.g. high blood pressure, diabetes, cancer, lung diseases, heart disease). We coded responses 0 for no illness, 1 for one illness, and 2 for two illnesses or more. Participants' ADL difficulty (0–6) was assessed and binary coded as 1 if they had any difficulty and 0 if they had no difficulty. Participants' IADL difficulty (0–5) was assessed and binary coded as 1 if they had any difficulty and 0 if they had no difficulty. We summed the score of chronic disease, ADL and IADL, and created a measure for physical vulnerability that ranged from 0 to 3.

Social support

The HRS evaluated positive social support through a set of questions that assessed the quality of interaction with social ties (Mendes de Leon et al., Reference Mendes de Leon, Cagney, Bienias, Barnes, Skarupski, Scherr and Evans2009; Kim and Kawachi, Reference Kim and Kawachi2017). Three questions were asked: ‘How much do they really understand the way you feel about things?’, ‘How much can you rely on them if you have a serious problem?’ and ‘How much can you open up to them if you need to talk about your worries?’ Respondents answered using a four-point scale (1 = a lot, 2 = some, 3 = a little, 4 = not at all) regarding the support received from spouses, children, family and friends. All items were reverse-coded and the mean score was generated.

Self-efficacy

Three single items measured the three self-efficacy domains of health, social life and finances (Lachman and Weaver, Reference Lachman and Weaver1998). To measure health efficacy we asked: ‘How would you rate the amount of control you have over your health these days?’ We measured social efficacy with: ‘How would you rate the amount of control you have over your social life these days?’ We assessed financial efficacy by asking: ‘How would you rate the amount of control you have over your financial situation these days?’ Respondents answered using a 0–10 scale (0 = no control at all, 10 = very much control).

Covariates

Gender was assessed with a binary variable: male (0) and female (1). Race was binary coded as 0 (White) and 1 (non-White). We merged them into the non-White group because there was no statistical significance between Blacks and other races in regression analyses (Yang and Lee, Reference Yang and Lee2010).

Marital status was also binary coded as 0 (other) and 1 (married or partnered). Age and education were measured in number of years.

Analytical strategy

Preliminary analyses included descriptive analysis; normality and correlation tests of the variables were conducted to understand the distribution of the main variables. The data analysis of the study used two-step structural equation modelling (SEM).

We used the structural model to examine mechanisms from involuntary retirement to loneliness through material vulnerability, physical vulnerability, social support, health efficacy, social efficacy and finance efficacy. We used goodness-of-fit test, Tucker–Lewis index (TLI), comparative fit index (CFI) and root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) to assess the study model's model fit. Previous literature suggests that good model fit is indicated by TLI and CFI values of 0.90 or higher and RMSEA values no higher than 0.08 (Hu and Bentler, Reference Hu and Bentler1999). Full analysis tested a multiple mediation path model using AMOS in a multi-group framework to estimate coefficients of possible paths simultaneously after controlling for covariates.

We used multi-group path analysis to examine statistical significance differences in the structural model by comparing a baseline model with no constraints defined and a second model where all paths were constrained to be equal. A nested chi-square test was used.

To examine significance of specific effects of multiple mediators (vulnerability, social support, self-efficacy) on the path between involuntary retirement and loneliness, we used a phantom variable approach. Although most mediation studies using SEM programs cannot examine specific mechanisms of multiple mediators, the phantom model is suitable to examine the effect of multiple mediators without changing parameters and model fit statistics (Macho and Ledermann, Reference Macho and Ledermann2011). Phantom models provide estimates and test specific mediating effects in the SEM program and contrast several parallel mediating paths; it examines which mediators are significant (Macho and Ledermann, Reference Macho and Ledermann2011). With bootstrapping sampling, phantom variables were created to the original model to test the significance of indirect effects and confirm whether the mediating variables were statistically effective between involuntary retirement and loneliness. Phantom model results represent the specific effects of interest within the total effect. As the bootstrapping procedure requires no missing data, multiple imputation was used for the final analysis with IBM SPSS 24.0 and AMOS 24.0.

Results

Descriptive statistics

Table 1 presents descriptive statistics of key variables for the sample. The average sample age was 75.68 years and education was 12.54 years. Female retirees had significantly more social support (mean = 3.12) and social efficacy (mean = 7.96) than males. Loneliness was higher among male retirees (mean = 1.60) than females (mean = 1.48). No gender difference was shown across other variables.

Table 1. Gender differences of sample characteristics

Notes: All estimates are weighted using person-level analysis weights. SD: standard deviation.

Significance levels: * p < 0.05, *** p < 0.001.

Measurement and structural models

The exploratory model tested for the total retiree sample provided direct paths from involuntary retirement to loneliness; indirect paths from involuntary retirement to loneliness through material and physical vulnerability; and indirect paths from involuntary retirement to loneliness through material and physical vulnerability, social support and self-efficacy. The chi-square statistic, χ2 (5, N = 2,086) = 2.111, p = 0.834, indicated that the hypothesised model statistically passed goodness-of-fit tests. Other measures indicated that the model had an acceptable fit to the data (RMSEA = 0.000, TLI = 1.01, CFI = 1.00). Nested model comparisons by gender suggested that the unconstrained structural model is statistically different (χ2(44) = 69.011, p = 0.009), supporting the hypothesis that paths (as a whole) differ across genders. Therefore, multi-group analysis was conducted separately for males and females.

Figure 2a depicts the structural model for male retirees and the significant indirect path for involuntary retirement. Involuntary retirement was significantly related to higher physical vulnerability (b = 0.207, p = 0.004), associated with low health efficacy (b = −0.693, p = 0.000) and lower loneliness (b = 0.018, p = 0.037), low social efficacy (b = −0.629, p = 0.000) and higher loneliness (b = −0.074, p = 0.000).

Figure 2. Structural model for (a) male retirees and (b) female retirees.

Significance levels: * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001.

Table 2. Multiple mediator model examining the path from involuntary retirement to loneliness by gender

Notes: P: abbreviation of each variable. CI: confidence interval. SE: standard error.

Among female retirees (Figure 2b), involuntary retirement was significantly directly associated with more loneliness (b = 0.044, p = 0.017). In addition, involuntary retirement was indirectly related to material vulnerability (b = 0.196, p = 0.000), which was associated with less social support (b = −0.055, p = 0.004) and more loneliness (b = −0.290, p = 0.000); less financial efficacy (b = −0.291, p = 0.001) and more loneliness (b = −0.066, p = 0.000); and high loneliness (b = 0.036, p = 0.004). Involuntary retirement among females was associated with physical vulnerability (b = 0.287, p = 0.000) which was associated with less social support (b = −0.076, p = 0.000) and more loneliness (b = −0.290, p = 0.000); low social efficacy (b = −0.666, p = 0.000) and more loneliness (b = −0.063, p = 0.000); less financial efficacy (b = −0.527, p = 0.000) and more loneliness (b = −0.066, p = 0.000); and more loneliness (b = 0.041, p = 0.000).

Specific indirect effects with phantom models

To evaluate the effects of mediation, we created a new phantom variable for each significant mediating variable in the structural model. This model assessed indirect effects with bootstrapped confidence intervals and standard errors (Cole and Maxwell, Reference Cole and Maxwell2003). All fit indices indicated the model had a good fit to the data (RMSEA = 0.039, TLI = 0.905, CFI = 0.938). Table 2 shows estimated effects with bootstrapped estimates, standard errors, significance and 95 per cent confidence intervals. Phantom analysis results proposed the path from involuntary retirement to loneliness mediated by physical vulnerability and social efficacy showed the largest indirect effect for male retirees (Figure 3a). For female retirees, the path from involuntary retirement to loneliness mediated by physical vulnerability and social efficacy and the path through material vulnerability showed the largest indirect effects. The path through material vulnerability showed the second largest effect in terms of indirect effect on loneliness (Figure 3b).

Figure 3. Phantom model for (a) male retirees and (b) female retirees.

Note: P: abbreviation of each variable. The letters ‘a' to ‘p' indicate the possible direct and indirect phantom paths in this model.

To summarise path coefficient and phantom analysis results, involuntary retirement does not directly affect loneliness among male retirees. However, involuntary retirement was significantly associated with higher loneliness mediated through physical vulnerability, health efficacy and social efficacy. For female retirees, involuntary retirement was directly associated with loneliness and also indirectly associated through internal and external coping resources. Involuntary retirement was associated with more loneliness through material vulnerability with low social support; material vulnerability; physical vulnerability with low social support; physical vulnerability with low social efficacy; and physical vulnerability (Table 3).

Table 3. Direct effect, indirect effect and total effect of mechanisms by gender

Discussion

Using the stress process theory and multi-group analysis in SEM approach, we investigated direct associations from involuntary retirement to loneliness and indirect associations through the secondary stressors (material and physical vulnerabilities) and coping resources (social support, health, social and financial efficacy) by gender. The empirical findings on the positive role of coping resources such as social support and social efficacy in reducing loneliness provide important evidence for the development of interventions to mitigate the adverse effects of involuntary retirement.

In RQ1, we expected to find an association between involuntary retirement and high loneliness. However, involuntary retirement directly affects loneliness only among female retirees. Despite higher overall loneliness scores among males in descriptive analysis results, the effects of involuntary retirement are significant only among female retirees. Retirement generally has stronger negative mental health outcomes for men, because men perceive work as their central life role and tend to have more continuous employment than women (Noh et al., Reference Noh, Kwon, Lee, Oh and Kim2019). However, results showed that women's involuntary retirement is directly associated with loneliness given the combined risk of underpreparation for post-retirement living (Flippen and Tienda, Reference Flippen and Tienda2000; Cahill et al., Reference Cahill, Giandrea and Quinn2013) and psychological characteristics that make women more vulnerable to negative life events and stress than men (Craig, Reference Craig1996; Sheppard and Wallace, Reference Sheppard and Wallace2018). Results align with previous studies demonstrating that psychological stress from unexpected job loss causes female retirees more late-life disadvantage (Henkens et al., Reference Henkens, van Solinge and Gallo2008).

In RQ2, we expected to find that involuntary retirement is associated with high vulnerability (material and physical) and low coping resources (social support, health efficacy, social efficacy, financial efficacy), leading to high loneliness. Involuntary retirement was connected, in both genders, by the path of high physical vulnerability, low social efficacy and high loneliness. This result is supported by previous literature on involuntary retirement, health and social efficacy. Involuntary retirees report more physical problems than voluntary retirees (Herzog et al., Reference Herzog, House and Morgan1991; König et al., Reference König, Lindwall and Johansson2019). Involuntary retirees with physical health problems had greater loneliness due to the mediating role of social efficacy between stressful experience and reduced psychological wellbeing.

This result highlights the mediating roles of physical vulnerability and social efficacy by examining the holistic mechanism structures of multiple mediators in one research model. In the mechanism from involuntary retirement to physical vulnerability, low social efficacy and high loneliness are supported by literature studying the mediating role of self-efficacy. Our result contributes to better understanding of the mechanism which is associated with involuntary retirement and loneliness by providing the empirical role of specific domains in self-efficacy.

Diverse mechanisms to loneliness found in the female group suggest that female involuntary retirees are more vulnerable because they are materially and physically vulnerable. Females reported lack of pension benefits and elevated post-retirement poverty risk because of disadvantaged employment – including interrupted work histories, lower average incomes, and concentration in industries and occupations that tend to have lower pension benefits (Flippen and Tienda, Reference Flippen and Tienda2000). We found that involuntary female retirees were more likely to report higher financial difficulty and declining health, and a lack of financial preparation for retirement. In addition, mechanisms from involuntary retirement to physical vulnerability are supported by previous findings that involuntary retirees are more likely to perceive post-retirement declines in health than voluntary retirees with more illnesses and unhealthy behaviours (König et al., Reference König, Lindwall and Johansson2019).

There were notable gender differences in the indirect mechanisms from involuntary retirement to loneliness. The differences in the female model can be summarised in two categories: (a) the indirect paths from involuntary retirement to loneliness through secondary stressors (material and physical vulnerability) and (b) the indirect paths from involuntary retirement to loneliness through both secondary stressors (material vulnerability/physical vulnerability) and coping resources (social support/financial efficacy). The indirect paths from involuntary retirement to loneliness through the secondary stressors (material and physical vulnerability) were significant in the female model but not in the male model. The mechanisms can be understood by the fact that women's higher risk of financial insecurity in retirement was attributable to their pre-retirement work experiences, including disparities in earning, years of employment and Social Security earnings records (Hartmann and English, Reference Hartmann and English2009). Qualitative research into the combined difficulty of involuntary retirement and secondary stressors should be considered in the future.

In addition, the indirect mechanisms from involuntary retirement to loneliness through secondary stressors (material vulnerability/physical vulnerability) and coping resources (social support/financial efficacy) among female retirees highlight the importance of the research findings. Previous literature found that loneliness is associated with the increased numbers of chronic stressors and fewer coping resources in times of stress (Hawkley et al., Reference Hawkley, Hughes, Waite, Masi, Thisted and Cacioppo2008). Financial hardship among older adults is known to reduce the social support and relationship (Burris et al., Reference Burris, Kihlstrom, Arce, Prendergast, Dobbins, McGrath and Himmelgreen2021). Our finding provides empirical evidence of the consecutive mechanisms between involuntary retirement and loneliness through material/physical vulnerability and social support/financial efficacy. Especially, when we consider both paths of (a) physical vulnerability and social efficacy and (b) the path with material vulnerability had the largest indirect effect on loneliness, we can understand experiencing physical vulnerability and having a reduced social efficacy is similarly harmful to feeling lonely as experiencing material vulnerability for the female involuntary retirees. This might reflect the unique circumstance of involuntary female retirees that female retirees have fewer assets and investments for post-retirement compared to male counterparts (Kang and Chung, Reference Kang and Chung2017) and older women have a high risk of having a disability and functional limitations in later life and live with functional limitations for longer periods (Carmel, Reference Carmel2019).

Among male retirees, the mechanism from involuntary retirement to loneliness mediated by physical vulnerability and social efficacy showed the relatively largest indirect effect for male retirees. Similar with female retirees, we found that the accumulated stresses of involuntary retirement and physical vulnerable decrease the social efficacy which increases the feeling of loneliness among male retirees.

In addition, the mechanism from involuntary retirement to loneliness mediated by physical vulnerability and health efficacy was significant. Specifically, males were associated with physical vulnerability, low health efficacy and low loneliness. Low health efficacy and low loneliness for males can be interpreted with the match condition between the real self and the ideal self. For example, physically vulnerable involuntary retirees with high health efficacy (high ideal self) may perceive gaps between their current condition and self – a condition creating emotional stress. Conversely, congruence between the actual (physically vulnerable) and ideal self (low health efficacy) should be associated with positive outcomes (low loneliness). Previous literature has shown that the condition of match between the real self and the ideal self is more important to males (Higgins, Reference Higgins1987), especially with job-related issues (Pietilä et al., Reference Pietilä, Calasanti, Ojala and King2020). Furthermore, when we consider that physical vulnerability was the only significant secondary stressor connected to coping resources and loneliness for males, future interventions to reduce the physical vulnerability such as monitoring services and temporary treatment services for male retirees can be considered.

The findings of our study provide an important theoretical direction for future research. A large body of literature on stress has consistently shown that resources have a buffering effect (Lakey and Orehek, Reference Lakey and Orehek2011) when adapting to adverse life events and transitions. By focusing on involuntary retirement, we empirically illuminated the theoretical proposal postulated in stress process theory with the complex association among the main effect between involuntary retirement as a primary stressor, material and physical vulnerability as a secondary stressor, and multiple factors as coping resources in the mechanism leading to loneliness. Further, the gender-specific findings of our study suggest an important direction for future research on a long-term mechanism to loneliness among retirees.

Many studies have found that later-year health and wellbeing is a dynamic and heterogeneous process that develops over the lifecourse and is embedded in the institution and culture within which older adults live (Elder and Shanahan, Reference Elder, Shanahan, Damon and Lerner2006). The mechanisms we found in the female involuntary retirees reiterate the disadvantages of women's work histories. Results align with previous literature for understanding women's cumulative disadvantages. Involuntary retirement and vulnerability (physical and material) highlight women's labour market adversity, which is perpetuated and magnified over the lifecourse (Crystal et al., Reference Crystal, Shea and Krishnaswami1992). Coping resources are known to be unevenly distributed by socio-economic status (George, Reference George, Binstock and George2011) and the influence of earlier life experiences accumulated over a lifecourse may lead to diverging trends of later-year health and wellbeing (Pearlin, Reference Pearlin2010). These theoretical proposals point to important future research that can look into the mechanism linking from earlier life experiences leading up to the involuntary retirement and vulnerabilities in post-retirement to loneliness with an explicit focus on various coping resources.

This study may also inform the gender-specified interventions and policies that mitigate combined disadvantages with material/physical vulnerability and reduced coping resources among involuntarily retired older adults in the USA. In general, workplace policies encouraging companies to reduce involuntary retirement and involving workers in retirement planning may decrease involuntary retirement and consequent post-retirement loneliness. More specific workplace interventions should prevent involuntary retirement among those at risk of it (e.g. older adults who have less education, low income and health problems). Our findings point to the importance of social support for female involuntary retirees. Although previous literature suggests that older females have stronger social support and networks than their male counterparts in general (Pillemer and Holtzer, Reference Pillemer and Holtzer2016), our results showed that female involuntary retirees with material and physical vulnerability had less social support. When we consider that social support has a huge influence on the quality of life of older adults (Umberson and Karas Montez, Reference Umberson and Karas Montez2010), we can consider developing social support intervention programmes in the local community for involuntary retirees in the future. Besides the current retirement support programme of financial support through Social Security, we can consider an integrated support programme for involuntary retirees with the comprehensive format of financial support, physical health management services, social work programmes including social support, and financial education and counselling in post-retirement years. Especially, we can consider using the group programme with the combined types of networking programme and social support and financial efficacy for female retirees in the community.

Our study has several limitations. This study could not identify the reason for retirement since there was a lack of data on reasons for involuntary retirement. Future studies using the reason for retirement are needed to understand involuntary retirement better. In addition, while dichotomising retirement status into a parsimonious indicator (voluntary/involuntary), a refined examination could benefit from examining alternative forms of retirement and employment. Finally, the period after retirement was not considered in the study. Future studies which count the diverse retirement status and stage need to be conducted. Although previous employment history was not counted in this study, in general men and women have different employment trajectories over the course of a lifetime. For example, women are more likely to work part-time or take a break to care for their families than men (Tang and Burr, Reference Tang and Burr2015; Lu et al., Reference Lu, Benson, Glaser, Platts, Corna, Worts and Sacker2017). As a result, this different previous employment history may impact on our outcomes for men and women in the current investigation. Future studies which count the diverse retirement status and period after retirement need to be conducted.

Limitations notwithstanding, our findings add to the growing literature on involuntary retirement by focusing on the gender-specific mechanism in the association between involuntary retirement and loneliness.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

Alley, DE, Soldo, BJ, Pagán, JA, McCabe, J, DeBlois, M, Field, SH, Asch, DA and Cannuscio, C (2009) Material resources and population health: disadvantages in health care, housing, and food among adults over 50 years of age. American Journal of Public Health 99, S693S701.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Avison, W (2016) Mental health. In Shanahan, MJ, Mortimer, JT and Johnson, MK (eds). Handbook of the Life Course (Handbooks of Sociology and Social Research). Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing.Google Scholar
Baker, E, Pham, NTA, Daniel, L and Bentley, R (2020) New evidence on mental health and housing affordability in cities: a quantile regression approach. Cities 96, 102455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bandura, A (1997) Self-efficacy: The Exercise of Control. New York, NY: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Bandura, A, Caprara, GV, Barbaranelli, C, Gerbino, M and Pastorelli, C (2003) Role of affective self-regulatory efficacy in diverse spheres of psychosocial functioning. Child Development 74, 769782.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bertoni, M, Maggi, S and Weber, G (2018) Work, retirement, and muscle strength loss in old age. Health Economics 27, 115128.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bishu, SG and Headley, AM (2020) Equal employment opportunity: women bureaucrats in male-dominated professions. Public Administration Review 80, 10631074.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blanch, A (2016) Social support as a mediator between job control and psychological strain. Social Science & Medicine 157, 148155.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blau, FD and Winkler, AE (2017) Women, Work, and Family (No. w23644). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boni-Saenz, AA (2020) Age, equality, and vulnerability. Theoretical Inquiries in Law 21, 161185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, J, Dynan, K and Figinski, T (2019) The risk of financial hardship in retirement: a cohort analysis. Wharton Pension Research Council Working Papers 532. Available at https://repository.upenn.edu/prc_papers/532.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burris, M, Kihlstrom, L, Arce, KS, Prendergast, K, Dobbins, J, McGrath, E, … Himmelgreen, D (2021) Food insecurity, loneliness, and social support among older adults. Journal of Hunger and Environmental Nutrition 16, 2944.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cahill, KE, Giandrea, MD and Quinn, JF (2013) Retirement patterns and the macroeconomy, 1992–2010: the prevalence and determinants of bridge jobs, phased retirement, and reentry among three recent cohorts of older Americans. The Gerontologist 55, 384403.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Calvo, E, Haverstick, K and Sass, SA (2009) Gradual retirement, sense of control, and retirees’ happiness. Research on Aging 31, 112135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caprara, GV, Regalia, C and Bandura, A (2002) Longitudinal impact of perceived self-regulatory efficacy on violent conduct. European Psychologist 7, 6369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carmel, S (2019) Health and well-being in late life: gender differences worldwide. Frontiers in Medicine 6, 218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, DC, Moen, P, Perry Jenkins, M and Smyer, M (2018) Postretirement life satisfaction and financial vulnerability: the moderating role of control. Journals of Gerontology: Series B 75, 849860.Google Scholar
Cole, DA and Maxwell, SE (2003) Testing mediational models with longitudinal data: questions and tips in the use of structural equation modeling. Journal of Abnormal Psychology 112, 558.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Craig, TKJ (1996) Adversity and depression. International Review of Psychiatry 8, 341353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crystal, S, Shea, D and Krishnaswami, S (1992) Educational attainment, occupational history, and stratification: determinants of later-life economic outcomes. Journal of Gerontology 47, S213S221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Denier, N, Clouston, SA, Richards, M and Hofer, SM (2017) Retirement and cognition: a life course view. Advances in Life Course Research 31, 1121.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dingemans, E and Henkens, K (2014) Involuntary retirement, bridge employment, and satisfaction with life: a longitudinal investigation. Journal of Organizational Behavior 35, 575591.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doba, N, Tokuda, Y, Saiki, K, Kushiro, T, Hirano, M, Matsubara, Y and Hinohara, S (2016) Assessment of self-efficacy and its relationship with frailty in the elderly. Internal Medicine 55, 27852792.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dushi, I, Iams, HM and Trenkamp, B (2017) The importance of social security benefits to the income of the aged population. Social Security Bulletin 77, 1.Google Scholar
Elder, GH Jr and Shanahan, MJ. (2006) The life course and human development. In Damon, W and Lerner, RM (eds). Handbook of Child Psychology: Theoretical Models of Human Development, vol. 1, 6th edn, Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons, pp. 665–715.Google Scholar
Ellis, CD, Munnell, AH and Eschtruth, AD (2014) Falling Short: The Coming Retirement Crisis and What to Do About It. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiori, KL, McIlvane, JM, Brown, EE and Antonucci, TC (2006) Social relations and depressive symptomatology: self-efficacy as a mediator. Aging & Mental Health 10, 227239.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Flippen, C and Tienda, M (2000) Pathways to retirement: patterns of labor force participation and labor market exit among the pre-retirement population by race, Hispanic origin, and sex. Journals of Gerontology: Series B 55, S14S27.Google ScholarPubMed
Fry, PS and Debats, DL (2002) Self-efficacy beliefs as predictors of loneliness and psychological distress in older adults. International Journal of Aging and Human Development 55, 233269.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
George, LK (2011) Social factors, depression, and aging. In Binstock, RH and George, LK (eds). Handbook of Aging and the Social Sciences. London: Elsevier, pp. 149162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grether, T, Sowislo, JF and Wiese, BS (2018) Top-down or bottom-up? Prospective relations between general and domain-specific self-efficacy beliefs during a work–family transition. Personality and Individual Differences 121, 131139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grundy, E (2006) Ageing and vulnerable elderly people: European perspectives. Ageing & Society 26, 105134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gunnarsson, E (2002) The vulnerable life course: poverty and social assistance among middle-aged and older women. Ageing & Society 22, 709728.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hajek, A and König, HH (2016) Longitudinal predictors of functional impairment in older adults in Europe – evidence from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe. PLOS ONE 11, e0146967.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hartmann, H and English, A (2009) Older women's retirement security: a primer. Journal of Women, Politics and Policy 30, 109140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hawkley, LC, Hughes, ME, Waite, LJ, Masi, CM, Thisted, RA and Cacioppo, JT (2008) From social structural factors to perceptions of relationship quality and loneliness: the Chicago Health, Aging, and Social Relations Study. Journals of Gerontology: Series B 63, S375S384.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Henkens, K, van Solinge, H and Gallo, WT (2008) Effects of retirement voluntariness on changes in smoking, drinking and physical activity among Dutch older workers. European Journal of Public Health 18, 644649.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hershey, DA and Henkens, K (2013) Impact of different types of retirement transitions on perceived satisfaction with life. The Gerontologist 54, 232244.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herzog, A, House, JS and Morgan, JN (1991) Relation of work and retirement to health and well-being in older age. Psychology and Aging 6, 202.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Higgins, ET (1987) Self-discrepancy: a theory relating self and affect. Psychological Review 94, 319.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Holt-Lunstad, J, Smith, TB, Baker, M, Harris, T and Stephenson, D (2015) Loneliness and social isolation as risk factors for mortality: a meta-analytic review. Perspectives on Psychological Science 10, 227237.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hu, LT and Bentler, PM (1999) Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis: conventional criteria versus new alternatives. Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal 6, 155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kang, J and Chung, S (2017) Trajectories of experiences on material hardship among mid and old age by age group. Korean Journal of Social Welfare Research 55, 534.Google Scholar
Kim, ES and Kawachi, I (2017) Perceived neighborhood social cohesion and preventive healthcare use. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 53, e35e40.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kim, A and Waldorf, BS (2019) Baby boomers’ paths into retirement. In Franklin, R (ed). Population, Place, and Spatial Interaction. Singapore: Springer, pp. 225247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
König, S, Lindwall, M and Johansson, B (2019) Involuntary and delayed retirement as a possible health risk for lower educated retirees. Journal of Population Ageing. 12, 475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lachman, ME and Weaver, SL (1998) Sociodemographic variations in the sense of control by domain: findings from the MacArthur studies of midlife. Psychology and Aging 13, 553.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lakey, B and Orehek, E (2011) Relational regulation theory: a new approach to explain the link between perceived social support and mental health. Psychological Review 118, 482.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lambert, SJ, Henly, JR and Kim, J (2019) Precarious work schedules as a source of economic insecurity and institutional distrust. RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 5, 218257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levy, H (2009) Income, material hardship, and the use of public programs among the elderly. Michigan Retirement Research Center, Ann Arbor, MI, Research Paper WP208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, L, Gou, Z and Zuo, J (2016) Social support mediates loneliness and depression in elderly people. Journal of Health Psychology 21, 750758.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lu, W, Benson, R, Glaser, K, Platts, LG, Corna, LM, Worts, D, … Sacker, A (2017) Relationship between employment histories and frailty trajectories in later life: evidence from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health 71, 439445.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Macho, S and Ledermann, T (2011) Estimating, testing, and comparing specific effects in structural equation models: the phantom model approach. Psychological Methods 16, 34.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Maciejewski, PK, Prigerson, HG and Mazure, CM (2000) Self-efficacy as a mediator between stressful life events and depressive symptoms: differences based on history of prior depression. British Journal of Psychiatry 176, 373378.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mather, M, Jacobsen, LA and Pollard, KM (2015) Aging in the United States. Washington, DC: Population Reference Bureau.Google Scholar
Mendes de Leon, CF, Cagney, KA, Bienias, JL, Barnes, LL, Skarupski, KA, Scherr, PA and Evans, DA (2009) Neighborhood social cohesion and disorder in relation to walking in community-dwelling older adults: a multilevel analysis. Journal of Aging and Health 21, 155171.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moen, P (1992) Women's Two Roles: A Contemporary Dilemma. New York, NY: Praeger.Google Scholar
Nikitin, J and Freund, AM (2018) Feeling loved and integrated or lonely and rejected in everyday life: the role of age and social motivation. Developmental Psychology 54, 1186.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Noh, JW, Kwon, YD, Lee, LJ, Oh, IH and Kim, J (2019) Gender differences in the impact of retirement on depressive symptoms among middle-aged and older adults: a propensity score matching approach. PLoS ONE 14, e0212607.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ong, AD, Uchino, BN and Wethington, E (2016) Loneliness and health in older adults: a mini-review and synthesis. Gerontology 62, 443449.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Park, H and Kang, MY (2016) Effects of voluntary/involuntary retirement on their own and spouses’ depressive symptoms. Comprehensive Psychiatry 66, 18.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pearlin, LI (2010) The life course and the stress process: some conceptual comparisons. Journals of Gerontology: Series B 65, 207215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearlin, LI and Skaff, MM (1996) Stress and the life course: a paradigmatic alliance. The Gerontologist 36, 239247.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pietilä, I, Calasanti, T, Ojala, H and King, N (2020) Is retirement a crisis for men? Class and adjustment to retirement. Men and Masculinities 23, 306325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pillemer, SC and Holtzer, R (2016) The differential relationships of dimensions of perceived social support with cognitive function among older adults. Aging & Mental Health 20, 727735.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rhee, MK, Mor Barak, ME and Gallo, WT (2016) Mechanisms of the effect of involuntary retirement on older adults’ self-rated health and mental health. Journal of Gerontological Social Work 59, 3555.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rico-Uribe, LA, Caballero, FF, Martín-María, N, Cabello, M, Ayuso-Mateos, JL and Miret, M (2018) Association of loneliness with all-cause mortality: a meta-analysis. PLOS ONE 13, e0190033.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rothwell, D, Khan, M and Cherney, K (2015) The Mediating Role of Financial Self-efficacy in the Financial Capability of Low-income Families. Available at https://ssrn.com/abstract=2646966.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rupert, PA, Stevanovic, P, Hartman, ERT, Bryant, FB and Miller, A (2012) Predicting work–family conflict and life satisfaction among professional psychologists. Professional Psychology: Research and Practice 43, 341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schoen, C, Doty, MM, Collins, SR and Holmgren, AL (2005) Insured but not protected: how many adults are underinsured? The experiences of adults with inadequate coverage mirror those of their uninsured peers, especially among the chronically ill. Health Affairs 24, W5-289.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schönfeld, P, Brailovskaia, J, Bieda, A, Zhang, XC and Margraf, J (2016) The effects of daily stress on positive and negative mental health: mediation through self-efficacy. International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology 16, 110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schröder-Butterfill, E and Marianti, R (2006) A framework for understanding old-age vulnerabilities. Ageing & Society 26, 935.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schulz, JH and Binstock, RH (2008) Aging Nation: The Economics and Politics of Growing Older in America. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sheppard, FH and Wallace, DC (2018) Women's mental health after retirement. Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services 56, 3745.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shin, O, Park, S, Amano, T, Kwon, E and Kim, B (2020) Nature of retirement and loneliness: The moderating roles of social support. Journal of Applied Gerontology 39, 12921302.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Soman, S, Bhat, SM, Latha, KS and Praharaj, SK (2016) Gender differences in perceived social support and stressful life events in depressed patients. East Asian Archives of Psychiatry 26, 22.Google ScholarPubMed
Sonnega, A, Faul, JD, Ofstedal, MB, Langa, KM, Phillips, JW and Weir, DR (2014) Cohort profile: the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). International Journal of Epidemiology 43, 576585.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Steptoe, A, Shankar, A, Demakakos, P and Wardle, J (2013) Social isolation, loneliness, and all-cause mortality in older men and women. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110, 57975801.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sung, J and Qiu, Q (2020) The impact of housing prices on health in the United States before, during, and after the great recession. Southern Economic Journal 86, 910940.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swan, GE, Dame, A and Carmelli, D (1991) Involuntary retirement, Type A behavior, and current functioning in elderly men: 27-year follow-up of the Western Collaborative Group Study. Psychology and Aging 6, 384.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Szinovacz, ME and Davey, A (2005) Predictors of perceptions of involuntary retirement. The Gerontologist 45, 3647.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tang, F and Burr, JA (2015) Revisiting the pathways to retirement: a latent structure model of the dynamics of transition from work to retirement. Ageing & Society 35, 17391770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, T, Mitchell, JA, Johnson-Lawrence, V, Watkins, DC and Modlin, CS Jr (2017) Self-rated health and health care access associated with African American men's health self-efficacy. American Journal of Men's Health 11, 13851387.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Umberson, D and Karas Montez, J (2010) Social relationships and health: a flashpoint for health policy. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 51, S54S66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van der Heide, I, van Rijn, RM, Robroek, SJ, Burdorf, A and Proper, KI (2013) Is retirement good for your health? A systematic review of longitudinal studies. BMC Public Health 13, 1180.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Solinge, H (2007) Health change in retirement: a longitudinal study among older workers in the Netherlands. Research on Aging 29, 225256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Virokannas, E, Liuski, S and Kuronen, M (2020) The contested concept of vulnerability – a literature review. European Journal of Social Work. 23, 327339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Welch, DC and West, RL (1995) Self-efficacy and mastery: its application to issues of environmental control, cognition, and aging. Developmental Review 15, 150171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, RL, Welch, DC and Knabb, PD (2002) Gender and aging: spatial self-efficacy and location recall. Basic and Applied Social Psychology 24, 7180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xie, H, Peng, W, Yang, Y, Zhang, D, Sun, Y, Wu, M and Su, Y (2018) Social support as a mediator of physical disability and depressive symptoms in Chinese elderly. Archives of Psychiatric Nursing 32, 256262.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yang, Y and Lee, LC (2010) Dynamics and heterogeneity in the process of human frailty and aging: evidence from the US older adult population. Journals of Gerontology: Series B 65, 246255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zebhauser, A, Baumert, J, Emeny, RT, Ronel, J, Peters, A and Ladwig, KH (2015) What prevents old people living alone from feeling lonely? Findings from the KORA-Age-study. Aging & Mental Health 19, 773780.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Figure 1. Theoretical framework.Note: The letters ‘A' to ‘H' indicate the possible direct and indirect paths in this model.

Figure 1

Table 1. Gender differences of sample characteristics

Figure 2

Figure 2. Structural model for (a) male retirees and (b) female retirees.Significance levels: * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001.

Figure 3

Table 2. Multiple mediator model examining the path from involuntary retirement to loneliness by gender

Figure 4

Figure 3. Phantom model for (a) male retirees and (b) female retirees.Note: P: abbreviation of each variable. The letters ‘a' to ‘p' indicate the possible direct and indirect phantom paths in this model.

Figure 5

Table 3. Direct effect, indirect effect and total effect of mechanisms by gender