Quist Helle Gram, Thomsen Birthe L, Christensen Ulla, Clausen Thomas, Holtermann Andreas, Bjorner Jakob B, Andersen Lars L
National Research Centre for the Working Environment, Lerso Parkallé 105, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.
BMC Public Health. 2014 Oct 18;14:1084. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-1084.
While previous research has indicated that unhealthy lifestyle is associated with sickness absence, this association may be confounded by occupational class. To avoid this potential confounding, we examined the association between lifestyle factors (smoking, leisure-time physical activity and body mass index) and the occurrence of long-term sickness absence (LTSA; more than three consecutive weeks of registered sickness absence) within a cohort of female health care workers.
A total of 7401 employees filled out a questionnaire about their health behaviour and work environment. Subsequently, they were followed for 12 months in a national register on social transfer payments (DREAM register). Cox's regression analyses, applied to grouped survival data, were used to estimate the prospective association between these lifestyle factors and LTSA.
We found significant associations between all three lifestyle factors and risk of LTSA. The strongest lifestyle factor was current smoking, which increased the risk of LTSA by 35% (95% CI: 1.17-1.54) compared to non- smokers. For body mass index, the risk of LTSA increased with the distance away from 18.5 kg/m2 in either direction (below 18.5 kg/m2: HR: 1.32 per kg/m2; 95% CI. 1.06-1.66; above 18.5 kg/m2: HR: 1.04 per kg/m2; 95% CI: 1.03-1.05). In other words, the more underweight or overweight the women were, the higher the risk of LTSA. A dose-response relationship was found between LTSA and leisure-time physical activity (trend test p-value = 0.01), so that increasing physical activity results in decreasing risk of LTSA.
In female healthcare workers, an unhealthy lifestyle (too high/ too low body mass index, smoking, and low physical activity) is associated with higher risk of LTSA.
虽然先前的研究表明不健康的生活方式与病假有关,但这种关联可能会受到职业阶层的混淆。为避免这种潜在的混淆,我们在一组女性医护人员中研究了生活方式因素(吸烟、休闲时间体育活动和体重指数)与长期病假(LTSA;连续三周以上登记病假)发生之间的关联。
共有7401名员工填写了一份关于其健康行为和工作环境的问卷。随后,在国家社会转移支付登记册(DREAM登记册)中对他们进行了12个月的跟踪。应用于分组生存数据的Cox回归分析用于估计这些生活方式因素与LTSA之间的前瞻性关联。
我们发现所有这三种生活方式因素与LTSA风险之间均存在显著关联。最强的生活方式因素是当前吸烟,与不吸烟者相比,当前吸烟使LTSA风险增加35%(95%CI:1.17 - 1.54)。对于体重指数,LTSA风险在两个方向上均随着偏离18.5kg/m²而增加(低于18.5kg/m²:HR:每kg/m²为1.32;95%CI:1.06 - 1.66;高于18.5kg/m²:HR:每kg/m²为1.04;95%CI:1.03 - 1.05)。换句话说,女性体重过轻或过重,LTSA风险就越高。在LTSA与休闲时间体育活动之间发现了剂量反应关系(趋势检验p值 = 0.01),因此增加体育活动会降低LTSA风险。
在女性医护人员中,不健康的生活方式(体重指数过高/过低、吸烟和体育活动不足)与较高的LTSA风险相关。