Researchers studied 8,714 people over two decades, starting when
they were 55 years old, on average. Overall, 749 participants, or 9
percent, were in debt or had no net worth at the start of the study.
Another 2,430, or 28 percent, experienced so-called "negative wealth
shock" and lost at least 75 percent of their net worth over a
two-year period at some point during follow-up.
During the study, 2,823 people died.
Compared with people who continuously maintained a comfortable level
of wealth, participants who experienced negative wealth shock were
50 percent more likely to die during the study, researchers report
in JAMA. People who started out in poverty or in debt were 67
percent more likely to die.
"Having wealth and losing it suddenly carries almost the same risk
for premature mortality as never having wealth," said lead study
author Lindsay Pool, a researcher at Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.
Poverty has long been linked to an increased risk of an early death,
Pool said by email. Previous research also suggests that a sudden
reversal of fortune may contribute to chronic stress, depression,
anxiety and high blood pressure, all of which are independently
associated with a greater risk of dying young.
"Unfortunately, there is not a simple take-home message for
patients, like 'stop smoking' or 'eat more fruits and vegetables,'"
Pool added. "And even things that we think might help, like 'keep
going to the doctor' or 'find ways to manage stress' are easier said
than done when your financial situation has just radically changed."
Among participants who maintained a comfortable level of wealth
throughout the study, the death rate was roughly 31 fatalities per
year for every 1,000 people.
In the group that suffered negative wealth shock, the death rate was
about 65 fatalities per year for every 1,000 participants.
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And among those who started out in poverty or in debt, the death
rate was approximately 73 fatalities per year for every 1,000
people.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how shifts in net worth might directly influence health or the
likelihood of premature death. Researchers also lacked data on
participants' wealth before they joined the study, including any
years in poverty or any sudden losses of net worth earlier in life.
"This study does not prove that loss of wealth directly causes
illness and death," said Dr. Alan Garber, provost at Harvard
University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and author of an
accompanying editorial.
"It shows that they go hand-in-hand," Garber said by email. "In
middle age and later in life, people who suffer wealth shocks don't
live as long."
Economists have long debated the causal relationship between wealth
and health, noted Michael Marmot, director of the Institute of
Health Equity at the University College of London in the UK.
While the study offers fresh evidence that losing money and assets
may hasten death, people may still be better off living at least
part of their life with these financial resources than never having
them at all, Marmot, who wasn't involved in the study, said by
email.
"This study, by showing that loss of wealth leads to an increased
risk of death over a twenty year period, after taking ill-health
into account, supports the causal connection between low wealth and
poor health," Marmot added. "Indeed, the worst off group in this
study was the group that had low wealth to begin with."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2q4pf7l JAMA, online April 3, 2018.
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