{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Does the time spent in retirement improve health? An IV-Poisson assessment on the incidence of cardiovascular diseases. {Author}: Fontana D;Ardito C;Leombruni R;Strippoli E;d'Errico A; {Journal}: Soc Sci Med {Volume}: 354 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Aug 29 {Factor}: 5.379 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117084 {Abstract}: In recent decades, pension reforms have been implemented to address the financial sustainability of social security systems, resulting in an increase in the retirement age. This adjustment has led to ongoing debates about the relationship between retirement and health. This study investigates the impact of time spent in retirement on the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in Italy. It uses a comprehensive dataset that includes socioeconomic, health, and behavioural risk factors, which is linked to administrative hospitalisation and mortality registers. To address the potential endogeneity of retirement, we employ an instrumental variables approach embedded in a Poisson rate model. The results show that, on average, years spent in retirement have a beneficial effect on the risk of CVD for both men and women. Each additional year spent in retirement reduces the incidence of such diseases by about 17% for men and 29% for women. Stratified analyses and robustness tests show that the benefits of retirement appear to be more robust and pronounced in men and in certain groups, particularly men in manual occupations or with poor ergonomic conditions at work. These results highlight that delaying access to retirement may lead to an increased burden of CVD in the older population. In addition, the protective effect of retirement on the development of CVD among workers with poorer ergonomic conditions underlines the different impact of increasing the retirement age on different categories of workers and the need for targeted and differentiated policies to avoid hitting the more vulnerable.