Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Scand J Public Health. 2015 Jul;43(5):469-80. doi: 10.1177/1403494815578947. Epub 2015 Apr 13.
Labour force activity and marriage share some pathways through which they potentially influence health. In this paper, we examine whether marriage and labour force participation interact in the way they influence mortality in the USA and six European countries.
We used data from the US National Health Interview Survey linked to the National Death Index, and national mortality registry data for Austria, England/Wales, Finland, Hungary, Norway and Spain (specifically, the Basque country) during 1999-2007, for men and women aged 30-59 years at baseline. We used Poisson regression to estimate both the additive (relative excess risk due to interaction) and multiplicative interactions between marriage and labour force activity on mortality.
Labour force inactivity was associated with higher mortality, but this association was stronger for unmarried, rather than married, individuals. Likewise, being unmarried was associated with higher mortality, but this association was stronger for inactive than for active individuals. To illustrate, among US women out of the labour force, being unmarried was associated with a 3.98 times (95%CI 3.28-4.82) higher risk of dying than being married; whereas the relative risk (RR) was 2.49 (95%CI 2.10-2.94), for women who were active in the labour market. Although this interaction between marriage and labour force activity was only significant for women on a multiplicative scale, there was a significant additive interaction for both men and women. The pattern was similar across all countries.
Marriage attenuated the increased mortality risk associated with labour force inactivity; while labour force activity attenuated the mortality risk associated with being unmarried. Our study emphasizes the importance of public health and social policies that improve the health and well-being of unmarried and inactive men and women.
劳动力活动和婚姻通过一些潜在的途径影响健康。本文考察了婚姻和劳动力参与是否会以影响美国和六个欧洲国家死亡率的方式相互作用。
我们使用了美国国家健康访谈调查的数据,这些数据与国家死亡指数相关联,以及奥地利、英国/威尔士、芬兰、匈牙利、挪威和西班牙(具体来说是巴斯克地区)在 1999 年至 2007 年期间 30-59 岁的男性和女性的国家死亡率登记数据。我们使用泊松回归来估计婚姻和劳动力活动对死亡率的相加(交互作用的相对超额风险)和相乘交互作用。
劳动力不活跃与更高的死亡率相关,但这种关联在未婚者中比在已婚者中更强。同样,未婚与更高的死亡率相关,但这种关联在不活跃者中比在活跃者中更强。例如,在美国不参加劳动力的女性中,未婚与已婚相比,死亡的风险高出 3.98 倍(95%CI 3.28-4.82);而对于活跃在劳动力市场的女性,相对风险(RR)为 2.49(95%CI 2.10-2.94)。尽管这种婚姻和劳动力活动之间的相互作用仅在乘法尺度上对女性有意义,但对男性和女性都有显著的加法相互作用。这种模式在所有国家都相似。
婚姻减弱了劳动力不活跃与死亡率增加相关的风险;而劳动力活动减弱了与未婚相关的死亡率风险。我们的研究强调了改善未婚和不活跃的男性和女性健康和福祉的公共卫生和社会政策的重要性。