STARTING NOW: Health, wealth and employment in the run up to state pension age
Join the launch of our new report on health and employment for those in their 50s and 60s.
🖥️ Watch here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=BKzS...
❓ Ask questions here: app.sli.do/event/1eFR29...
Posts by English Longitudinal Study of Ageing
📈New ELSA research reveals that many older adults in England maintain stable mental health following major life events such as bereavement, retirement or hospitalisation:
bit.ly/4nCKzMc
#LaterLife #MentalHealth #AgeingWell
Book your place at the ELSA latest data release and data user event:
📅Wednesday 3rd December, 11am-3pm
📝Hear all the latest developments in Wave 11 and plans for the future
📊Submit your data queries
🌎Get a guided tour of the @g2aging.bsky.social
Register: www.eventbrite.com/e/elsa-lates...
People who stop #smoking in middle age could reduce their cognitive decline so dramatically that within 10 years their chances of developing dementia are the same as someone who has never smoked.
www.theguardian.com/society/2025...
Are older generations getting smarter?
Dr Mikaela Bloomberg (UCL IEHC) talks to Tim Harford on BBC Radio 4's "More or Less", about research finding that the average 70-year-old in 2022 has the same cognitive abilities as a 53-year-old in 2000.
www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/...
Today’s inflation figure of 3.8% will be used for most benefit uprating next April. But state pension will rise in line with triple lock – based on earnings growth of 4.8%.
Below is my @theifs.bsky.social piece on issues around the triple lock and what we think is a better alternative.
NEW: What are the effects of the ‘triple lock’ and how could it be reformed?
Ahead of new inflation figures tomorrow, @heidikarj.bsky.social explains the nature of the state pension 'triple lock' and why reform is needed.
📗 Read the briefing here: ifs.org.uk/articles/wha...
Quitting smoking in middle age or later is linked to slower cognitive decline over the long term, according to a new study led by Dr Mikaela Bloomberg @mapbloom.bsky.social that suggests, for cognitive health, "it is never too late to quit" @ucliehc.bsky.social @uclpophealthsci.bsky.social
Read the ELSA research behind the story: www.thelancet.com/journals/lan...
New ELSA research shows women with early or surgical menopause face greater risk of leaving work.
Hormone therapy soon after menopause could help more women stay employed:
bit.ly/3L4kNm7
#Menopause #WomensHealth #Workforce #MenopauseAtWork #ELSAstudy
More than one million people a year are now being referred by GPs to social prescribing services 🧑⚕️
"This underlines what a fundamental and important service social prescribing now is within the NHS" - Professor Daisy Fancourt www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2025/se...
Lung function among people in England who used wood or coal burning stoves or open fires in their own home declined faster over eight years compared to those without these heat sources, finds a new analysis led by Dr Laura Horsfall @uclpophealthsci.bsky.social www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2025/se...
Chart shows effect of increasing state pension age from 60 to 65 on the weekly individual income of 60- to 64-year-old women. Title states: "Women aged 60–64 who were out of work at 58 saw their weekly income fall by £81 on average as a result of the state pension age increase."
NEW: Previous state pension age increases have not been felt equally: women already out of employment in their late 50s were particularly hard hit by the rise from 60 to 65 in the 2010s.
THREAD on Jonathan Cribb, Anna Henry and @heidikarj.bsky.social’s new research on state pension rises:
EVENT: What should the upcoming State Pension Age Review consider?
Wed 17 Sept | 10:30 – 11:30 | Online
Join our event this week on the crucial context for the challenges the government faces in setting the state pension age.
➡️ Sign up here: ifs.org.uk/events/what-...
Come and join the ELSA team! We are looking for a Research Fellow in Ageing and Epidemiology to work on a new NIHR-funded grant:
www.elsa-project.ac.uk/job-vacancies
📆Closing date: 8th October
Image shows two older women enjoying gaming on a sofa, holding controllers and expressing excitement and joy, credit: istock.com/mediaphotos, with Centre for Population Change and Connecting Generations logos. Accompanying text reads: Take part in research. Calling all gamers aged 65+: Shape understanding of how gaming influences wellbeing. Are you 65 or older, and have played some form of digital/video games? Take part in our online survey and help us discover how gaming can be used to improve wellbeing in later life
Are you 65+ or know someone who is?
We're seeking participants aged 65+ who play or have played digital/video games to complete an online survey to inform research on how #gaming can enhance later life wellbeing- please share! @ageingbetter.bsky.social
app.onlinesurveys.jisc.ac.uk/s/stirling/e...
New article in The Conversation on grandparenting by Giorgio Di Gessa: who provides grandparental childcare in England, how often, and how this varies by gender and socio-economic background
#ELSAStudy #GrandparentCare #Ageing #Childcare
Monday anxiety found to leave lasting stress signs across body www.independent.co.uk/news/science...
📚 Read the ELSA research: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
New study suggests dementia rates declining in younger generations, but data limited by:
• High-income country data only
• Prediction models vs clinical diagnosis
• No socioeconomic analysis
Global projections still show cases rising to 139M by 2050
zurl.co/rMp4q
📰 "Govt must act swiftly after IFS findings to support pensions system"
Read an op-ed by David Gauke and Joanne Segars about our final Pensions Review report in the FT Adviser 👇
www.ftadviser.com/pension-refo...
A new @nature.com NPJ aging study found a biological age metric and accelerated #aging predicted higher mortality risk and age-related health decline using Gateway #Harmonized HRS, @elsa-study.bsky.social, MHAS, CRELES, and CHARLS #data.
Read here: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Abstract As populations age and informal caregiving becomes more widespread, the health consequences of providing care are becoming a key concern for societies. Sociological theories of stress appraisal and role strain posit detrimental consequences to the health and wellbeing of caregivers. Conversely, role enhancement theory holds that caregiving can have positive health consequences. Using data from the English Longitudinal Study of Aging (ELSA) collected among adults aged 50 years or older with a follow-up period of up to 20 years (2002–23, 88,225 observations of 20,217 respondents), we examine associations between transitions into and out of caregiving, and two key health outcomes which have been understudied as consequences of caregiving, namely: allostatic load and cognitive functioning. We estimate asymmetric fixed-effects models which model changes in health outcomes as a function of transitions into and out of caregiving while accounting for unobserved between-person heterogeneity. Our results show that caregiving is associated with better cognitive health for both men and women, but not with improved biomarker-based allostatic load. Results do not differ by caregiving intensity. Our findings provide support for role enhancement theory, suggesting that caregivers benefit in terms of cognitive functioning, even if a biomarker-based approach to measuring stress-related health outcome does not corroborate an overall health benefit. We formulate implications for policy-making and directions for future research.
Panel A: Transitioning into caregiving is associated with lower allostatic load for men. Transitioning into caregiving is associated with better memory, and this association is stronger for women than for men. Panel B: Women’s memory functioning improves when they intensify their caregiving engagement. Coefficients from asymmetric fixed effects models controlling for age, marital status, children, grandchildren, siblings, parents, income, and wealth. Spikes denote 95% confidence intervals. Full models reported in the Appendix, Table A.3, Table A.4.
NEW ARTICLE by CREST's @ppraeg.bsky.social in @ssreditorial.bsky.social: Dynamics of Later-Life Caregiving and Health. Insights From Biomarker Data and Cognitive Tests using @elsa-study.bsky.social
Co-authored with Ariane Bertogg and @klararaiber.bsky.social
OPEN ACCESS: doi.org/10.1016/j.ss...
Higher levels of wellbeing may help reduce the risk of memory loss in middle age, suggests a study led by Dr Amber John and Prof Joshua Stott @uclpals.bsky.social @uclbrainscience.bsky.social www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2025/ju...
🌍 This week I & @elsa-study.bsky.social team, had the privilege of hosting an international workshop of The Gateway to Global Aging Environmental Exposome Research Group focused on research into the impact of air pollution and extreme temperatures on brain health, mental health, and physical health
🗓️ Note that this is the unweighted dataset, weighted data due to be archived later this month
🚨ICYMI: ELSA Wave 11 data now available on UKDS:
beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk/datacatalogu...
🔖 NEW article using @elsa-study.bsky.social
Older adults who struggle with daily tasks are more likely to have depressive symptoms, esp. if they experience #loneliness or difficulties accessing #care, so timely access to #socialcare + tackling loneliness could help later life #mentalhealth
Read the research behind the story that used ELSA data: jamanetwork.com/journals/jam...
👥 Are you 50+? Help researchers map how air pollution impacts our health 🌬️❤️
⌚ Wear an activity and air quality monitor for five days
📱 Complete a daily questionnaire
🎁 Get your personalised report + £30 voucher
Sign up now:
👉 www.elsa-project.ac.uk/post/are-you...
Middle-aged and older adults who experience pain are more likely to have had worsening symptoms of depression up to eight years before the pain began, finds a new study led by Dr @mapbloom.bsky.social @ucliehc.bsky.social, suggesting depression therapy might reduce or delay later pain