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Finance/Thinkstock - Lifestyle changes and the aging process can threaten baby
boomer waistlines.
If your jeans don’t button quite as
easily as they used to and your shirts feel extra snug these days, you’re not alone:
Thousands of older folks struggle with weight gain when they retire. So, is
retirement making you fat?
At a time when out-of-pocket medical
costs have been steadily rising for seniors, it’s a question that’s just as
important to financial well-being as to physical health. And it’s possible that
retirement is connected to adding extra pounds, according to several recent
studies.
A study from the Institute for
Health Policy Studies titled “The Effect of Retirement on Weight,” for example,
studied a group of almost 38,000 retirees and concluded that retirement is
connected to “modest weight gain.” The study focused on “body mass index,” or
BMI, which is calculated by dividing a person’s weight by his or her height.
The researchers found that the average person added .24 to their body mass
index upon retirement.
That’s not a huge amount --
typically 2 to 4 pounds. But other research suggested that some subgroups of
retirees were more vulnerable. In a separate study, women who retired were more
likely to gain weight than their same-age working counterparts. A third study
found that men who retired from physically demanding jobs were more likely than
others to gain weight within six years.
So what’s the explanation for these
extra pounds? Some of the weight gain may be due to the fact that many people
are less physically active when they retire, and that they have less structured
meal times or change their eating patterns in retirement, according to a study
from the University of Iowa College of Medicine. And some of it has less to do
with retirement per se than with the aging process. Our metabolisms slow as we
age, explains Desmond Ebanks, a doctor and founder of Alternity Healthcare, a
medical practice that focuses on older patients. In fact, “we have to give up
about 5% of the amount of calories we are eating every decade after 40 if we
want to prevent weight gain,” estimates fitness and lifestyle coach Rona Lewis,
author of “Does This Cookbook Make Me Look Fat?”
This weight gain can do more than
just impact your body image -- it can cost you, big. “There is no question that
being obese or overweight is more costly than being of normal weight,” write
the authors of “A Heavy Burden: The Individual Costs of Being Overweight and
Obese in the United States,” a 2010 study from researchers at George Washington
University’s School of Public Health and Health Services. In fact, the study
showed that each year, morbidly obese people pay $2,845 more in medical costs
than their normal-weight counterparts; severely obese, $1,566; moderately
obese, $807; and overweight, $346.
The good news: “Weight gain does not
have to be a part of retirement,” says Carmella Sebastian, a doctor and the
senior medical director of clinical client solutions for Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Florida. Here are five things you can do to keep yourself slim and
trim -- and potentially save money.
Eat better. It sounds like a no-brainer, of course, but it’s
particularly important for retirees -- some of whom begin to eat out more or
snack out of boredom, leading to weight gain, says registered dietician Lisa
Hugh, who specializes in nutrition therapy. Ebanks recommends that retirees try
to stay away from many packaged foods; avoid excess refined carbs (think white
flour, sweetened drinks, and any form of table sugar); eat more fruits, veggies
and whole grains; and make sure they get adequate protein.
Exercise more. Exercise is important to losing weight, but seniors need to
do more than just cardio. “Muscle is more efficient, so weight-lifting -- even
small weights -- will increase muscle mass and hence, your metabolism,” Hugh
says.
Get enough sleep. “Inadequate sleep can lead to weight gain,” says Ebanks,
who recommends trying to get seven to nine hours of sleep a night.
Manage stress. Retirement often comes with a lot of changes, and these can
cause stress -- which in turn can mean weight gain due to “stress eating” and
hormonal changes associated with stress. Effective stress-management techniques
include exercise and meditation, experts say.
Get your blood work done. Sometimes,
something more serious than a lifestyle change can be causing the extra pounds.
“Get your blood work checked and in particular, your thyroid function,” says
Sebastian. The thyroid has an impact on metabolism, she explains, so a
malfunctioning gland can lead to weight gain -- a problem you could address
with a thyroid supplement.
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