Among the 2,386 women in the sample, having depressive symptoms was strongly associated with leaving employment; 26.5 percent of women with depression left employment, compared with 19.1 percent of women without depression (odds ratio [OR]=1.57, p=.002). For the 2,409 men in the sample, the difference was much smaller—16.5 percent and 14.4 percent, respectively—and not statistically significant. Of the 831 respondents who left the labor force during 1994 to 1996, 7.6 percent became unemployed, 1.8 percent partially retired, 73.4 percent retired, 6.1 percent became disabled, and 11.1 percent left the labor force for other reasons. The only substantial difference we found between men and women was that men tended to consider themselves retired (79.3 percent) and women tended to report they were out of the labor force for other reasons (17.1 percent).