(Press-News.org) COLUMBIA, Mo. – As more baby boomers reach retirement age, state governments face the likelihood of higher workforce turnover. For example, in the state of Missouri, more than 25 percent of all active state employees will be eligible to retire by 2016. Such large numbers of retirees threaten the continuity, membership and institutional histories of the state government workforce, according to Angela Curl, assistant professor in the University of Missouri School of Social Work. In a case study of the state of Missouri's Deferred Retirement Option Provision (BackDROP), Curl concluded that states may need to restructure deferred retirement incentives to encourage more employees to remain on the job longer and minimize the disruption to government operations.
"Employers need to ask if their organizations are designed to promote turnover or promote retention," Curl said. "States should recognize the benefits of promoting retention. Using delayed retirement incentives to encourage retention is important, particularly when dealing with older employees."
Curl said that a good system of employee retention is inclusive, flexible and accounts for the wide range of circumstances that retirement-eligible employees may consider when deciding to defer retirement. These circumstances could include caregiving for older parents or having a spouse who is retired. In Missouri, BackDROP offers a one-time payment equaling 90 percent of what employees would have received in benefits for an additional five years of service as incentive to delay retirement.
The best predictors of whether state employees chose to delay retirement were: their levels of awareness of retirement options, job functions, and how old they were before they became eligible for deferring retirement. The more aware employees were of BackDROP, the more likely they were to defer retirement. Employees who became eligible for deferring retirement at an older age also were more likely to choose to work longer.
Curl's study was designed to see if race, sex, level of education and marital status played a significant role in retirement-eligible employees' decisions to defer retirement. The study of 296 Missouri state employees eligible for BackDROP revealed that these social demographics did not play significant roles in employees' decision to work longer.
"Deferred retirement options like BackDROP may be effective at retaining skilled employees in positions that are difficult to fill," Curl said. "Often, state employees retire and go on to second careers in the private sector."
INFORMATION:Curl's research, "A case study of Missouri's deferred retirement incentive for state employees," will appear in the Journal of Aging and Social Policy. Kirsten Havig, who received her doctorate from MU, co-authored the paper and now works at the University of Oklahoma-Tulsa. The School of Social Work is part of the MU College of Human Environmental Sciences. Since the case study was completed, the state of Missouri discontinued BackDROP for new hires.
Aging workforce requires new strategies for employee retention, MU researcher says
Re-evaluating retirement plans becomes more important as baby boomers, particularly those in government jobs, reach retirement age
2014-04-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Scientists say new computer model amounts to a lot more than a hill of beans
2014-04-03
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Crops that produce more while using less water seem like a dream for a world with a burgeoning population and already strained food and water resources. This dream is coming closer to reality for University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign researchers who have developed a new computer model that can help plant scientists breed better soybean crops.
Under current climate conditions, the model predicts a design for a soybean crop with 8.5 percent more productivity, but using 13 percent less water, and reflecting 34 percent more radiation back into space, ...
Dress and behavior of mass shooters as factors to predict and prevent future attacks
2014-04-03
New Rochelle, NY, April 3, 2014–In many recent incidents of premeditated mass shooting the perpetrators have been male and dressed in black, and may share other characteristics that could be used to identify potential shooters before they commit acts of mass violence. Risk factors related to the antihero, dark-knight persona adopted by these individuals are explored in an article in Violence and Gender, a new peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the Violence and Gender website at http://www.liebertpub.com/vio.
In ...
Ouch! Computer system spots fake expressions of pain better than people
2014-04-03
BUFFALO, N.Y. — A joint study by researchers at the University of California, San Diego, the University at Buffalo, and the University of Toronto has found that a computer–vision system can distinguish between real or faked expressions of pain more accurately than can humans.
This ability has obvious uses for uncovering pain malingering — fabricating or exaggerating the symptoms of pain for a variety of motives — but the system also could be used to detect deceptive actions in the realms of security, psychopathology, job screening, medicine and law.
The study, "Automatic ...
New study casts doubt on heart regeneration in mammals
2014-04-03
The mammalian heart has generally been considered to lack the ability to repair itself after injury, but a 2011 study in newborn mice challenged this view, providing evidence for complete regeneration after resection of 10% of the apex, the lowest part of the heart. In a study published by Cell Press in Stem Cell Reports on April 3, 2014, researchers attempted to replicate these recent findings but failed to uncover any evidence of complete heart regeneration in newborn mice that underwent apex resection.
"Our results question the usefulness of the apex resection model ...
Hummingbirds' 22-million-year-old history of remarkable change is far from complete
2014-04-03
The first comprehensive map of hummingbirds' 22-million-year-old family tree—reconstructed based on careful analysis of 284 of the world's 338 known species—tells a story of rapid and ongoing diversification. The decade-long study reported in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on April 3 also helps to explain how today's hummingbirds came to live where they do.
Part of the secret to the birds' remarkable success lies in the formation of nine principal groups or clades, hummingbirds' unique relationship to flowering plants, and the birds' continued spread into new ...
Lactase persistence alleles reveal ancestry of southern African Khoe pastoralists
2014-04-03
In a new study a team of researchers lead from Uppsala University show how lactase persistence variants tell the story about the ancestry of the Khoe people in southern Africa. The team concludes that pastoralist practices were brought to southern Africa by a small group of migrants from eastern Africa. The study is published in Current Biology today.
"This is really an exciting time for African genetics. Up until now, routes of human migration in Africa were inferred mostly based on linguistics and archaeology, now we can use genetics to test these hypotheses." says ...
Cancer and the Goldilocks effect
2014-04-03
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have found that too little or too much of an enzyme called SRPK1 promotes cancer by disrupting a regulatory event critical for many fundamental cellular processes, including proliferation.
The findings are published in the current online issue of Molecular Cell.
The family of SRPK kinases was first discovered by Xiang-Dong Fu, PhD, professor in the Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine at UC San Diego in 1994. In 2012, Fu and colleagues uncovered that SPRK1 was a key signal transducer ...
Study helps unravel the tangled origin of ALS
2014-04-03
MADISON, Wis. — By studying nerve cells that originated in patients with a severe neurological disease, a University of Wisconsin-Madison researcher has pinpointed an error in protein formation that could be the root of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Also called Lou Gehrig's disease, ALS causes paralysis and death. According to the ALS Association, as many as 30,000 Americans are living with ALS.
After a genetic mutation was discovered in a small group of ALS patients, scientists transferred that gene to animals and began to search for drugs that might treat those ...
Patient stem cells help identify common problem in ALS
2014-04-03
Harvard stem cell scientists have discovered that a recently approved medication for epilepsy may possibly be a meaningful treatment for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)—Lou Gehrig's disease, a uniformly fatal neurodegenerative disorder. The researchers are now collaborating with Massachusetts General Hospital to design an initial clinical trial testing the safety of the treatment in ALS patients.
The investigators all caution that a great deal needs to be done to assure the safety and efficacy of the treatment in ALS patients, before physicians should start offering ...
Tumor suppressor gene TP53 mutated in 90 percent of most common childhood bone tumor
2014-04-03
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. – April 3, 2014) – The St. Jude Children's Research Hospital—Washington University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project found mutations in the tumor suppressor gene TP53 in 90 percent of osteosarcomas, suggesting the alteration plays a key role early in development of the bone cancer. The research was published today online ahead of print in the journal Cell Reports.
The discovery that TP53 is altered in nearly every osteosarcoma also helps to explain a long-standing paradox in osteosarcoma treatment, which is why at standard doses radiation therapy is largely ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Discordance in creatinine- and cystatin C–based eGFR and clinical outcomes
Disagreement between two kidney function tests predicts serious health problems
American College of Cardiology, OpenEvidence to advance AI-enabled, evidence-based cardiovascular care
OHSU researchers develop promising drug for aggressive breast cancer
Evaluating the potential of a sleep intervention among youth at high-risk for borderline personality disorder
Saturn’s icy moon may host a stable ocean fit for life, study finds
More children, shorter lifespan? Clear evidence from the Great Finnish Famine
Climate intervention techniques could reduce the nutritional value of crops
Mapping resilient supply solutions for graphite, a critical mineral powering energy storage: Rice experts’ take
Effects of sodium glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors by diabetes status and level of albuminuria
Young people using unregulated nicotine pouches despite health risks
New study finds family and caregivers can help spot post-surgery delirium early
High-impact clinical trials generate promising results for improving kidney health - part 2
More Americans are on dialysis. Could more safely wean off it?
A conservative dialysis strategy and kidney function recovery in dialysis-requiring acute kidney injury
More Americans, especially Black adults, are dying before they can access Medicare benefits
Death Valley plant reveals blueprint for building heat-resilient crops
Racial disparities in premature mortality and unrealized Medicare benefits across US states
Heat- and cold-related mortality burden in the US from 2000 to 2020
Research hints at the potential of pain relief with CBD
Dr. Johnson V. John appointed as a Standing Member of the NIH Musculoskeletal Tissue Engineering (MTE) Study Section
TCF/LEF transcription factors emerge as druggable targets in Wnt signaling, offering new hope for fibrosis and cancer therapies
New alloy design could power solid-state batteries that charge faster and last longer
Discovery to display: FAU unveils the ‘Art of Science’ winners
Achieving electrocatalytic activity toward oxygen reduction reaction based on Ruddlesden-Popper type cathode catalyst for solid oxide fuel cells
Ceramic-based electromagnetic interference shielding materials: mechanisms, optimization strategies, and pathways to next-generation applications
NIH-funded exploratory study to seek possible targets for treating alcohol use disorder
Hanyang University researchers develop of novel high-resolution mechanoluminescent platform technology
Hidden HPV-linked cell type may drive early cervical cancer, scientists report
Metros cut car use in European cities, but trams fall short
[Press-News.org] Aging workforce requires new strategies for employee retention, MU researcher saysRe-evaluating retirement plans becomes more important as baby boomers, particularly those in government jobs, reach retirement age





