Rijken Mieke, Spreeuwenberg Peter, Schippers Joop, Groenewegen Peter P
NIVEL (Netherlands institute for health services research), P,O, Box 1568, 3500 BN, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
BMC Public Health. 2013 Sep 4;13:803. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-803.
Compared to participation rates among general populations, participation of people with chronic illness in the labour market lags behind. This is undesirable, both from the perspective of individuals' well-being as from a macro-economic perspective for western countries where concerns exist about labour supply and sustainability of social security in the near future. To help develop successful policy measures to prevent early drop-out and support reintegration, we aimed to gain insight into the role of three age related characteristics that may relate to labour participation chances of people with chronic illness: the duration of their illness, how old they were when the chronic disease was diagnosed and the historical year in which the diagnosis was established.
We analyzed data of one (first) measurement of several cohorts of people diagnosed with a somatic chronic disease, who (had) participated in the Dutch 'National Panel of people with Chronic illness or Disability' since 1998 (N = 4634 in total). Multi-level logistic regression analyses were conducted to estimate random effects of the age at diagnosis and the year of diagnosis and fixed effects of illness duration on labour participation, while correcting for the effects of socio-demographic and disease characteristics and socio-economic indicators.
A significant part of the variation in labour participation among people with chronic illness relates to the age they had when they were diagnosed. Furthermore, a longer illness duration is significantly associated with a lower chance of being economically active. This is more the case for men than for women. Labour participation of cancer survivors depends on the phase of the illness they find themselves in. No evidence was found that the year in which the diagnosis was established matters for employment chances later in life.
Age at diagnosis and illness duration relate to chronically ill people's chances to participate in the labour market, but how and how strong they relate to labour participation depend on gender and the type of chronic disease at stake. Prospective studies are needed to assess illness trajectories of specific diagnostic groups along with the development of their school and work careers.
与普通人群的参与率相比,慢性病患者在劳动力市场的参与度滞后。这是不可取的,无论是从个人福祉的角度,还是从西方国家宏观经济的角度来看,这些国家近期都对劳动力供应和社会保障的可持续性存在担忧。为了帮助制定成功的政策措施以防止过早退出并支持重新融入,我们旨在深入了解三个与年龄相关的特征所起的作用,这些特征可能与慢性病患者的劳动力参与机会有关:疾病持续时间、慢性病确诊时的年龄以及确诊的历史年份。
我们分析了自1998年以来参与荷兰“慢性病或残疾人群全国小组”的几个被诊断患有躯体慢性病队列的一次(首次)测量数据(总共N = 4634)。进行了多层次逻辑回归分析,以估计确诊年龄和确诊年份的随机效应以及疾病持续时间对劳动力参与的固定效应,同时校正社会人口统计学和疾病特征以及社会经济指标的影响。
慢性病患者劳动力参与的显著差异部分与确诊时的年龄有关。此外,较长的疾病持续时间与经济活跃的可能性较低显著相关。男性的情况比女性更明显。癌症幸存者的劳动力参与取决于他们所处的疾病阶段。没有证据表明确诊年份对晚年的就业机会有影响。
确诊年龄和疾病持续时间与慢性病患者参与劳动力市场的机会有关,但它们与劳动力参与的方式和强度取决于性别以及所涉及的慢性病类型。需要进行前瞻性研究来评估特定诊断组的疾病轨迹以及他们的学业和职业生涯发展。