The Encore Career: Post Retirement Paradigm Shift

Have you heard of “encore careers?” Shifting from the trends of the past where once a person retired they were finished working, it is now becoming more and more popular (due to both necessity and desire) for retirees to begin second occupations.

While most retirees plan to spend their post-work years traveling, volunteering, spending time with grandchildren, or improving their golf game, many are energized by discussing their “next act” in terms of work – their encore career…nearly 60 percent of workers who are age 60 or older anticipate looking for a new job after retiring. Whether it’s out of a necessity to supplement retirement income or a desire to simply to stay active, intellectually engaged, or inspired, working in retirement is quickly becoming the norm. (Source: Forbes)

Four reasons why the “encore career” has become more and more mainstream:

  • Financial Advantages: postponing drawdown of savings and social security while continuing to increase net worth is enticing to many, especially when life expectancy continues to rise.
  • Bridging the Gap: if contemplating the inevitable work-to-retirement transition spikes your anxiety, a more gradual change may prove more fulfilling for you.
  • Health Benefits: more and more evidence suggest cognitive, psychological, and social benefits to working…
  • Intrinsic Rewards: pivoting from the stable, lucrative, career path that sustained you and your family to a more philanthropic, creatively stimulating, or simply a riskier occupation may revitalize you…

Are you a retiree already involved in an encore career? Or someone who is considering it? Please share your insight and thoughts!

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Is Midlife Obesity an Alzheimer Disease Risk Factor?

There are many detrimental effects a person can experience from being overweight or obese and new studies find that they may be potential contributors to the development of Alzheimer’s later in life.

There is particularly strong evidence for midlife obesity as a risk factor for AD [Alzheimer Disease]. A cross-sectional study published in Obesity found an inverse relationship between BMI and cognitive function among healthy late middle-aged adults, and various observational studies have reported that obesity in midlife increased the risk for late-life dementia.4 In research recently published in JAMA, high BMI in midlife was the only midlife vascular risk factor that demonstrated a significant association with increased late-life brain amyloid deposition (odds ratio, 2.06).5 (Source: Obesity and Alzheimer Disease: Exploring Risk Modification)

Learn more about these studies and their findings, including direct reference links to individual studies, in the full article here: “Obesity and Alzheimer Disease: Exploring Risk Modification.”

 

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