Edge Clare Ellen, Cooper Anna Mary, Coffey Margaret
1University of Salford, Manchester, UK.
Department of Psychology and Public Health, School of Health Sciences, Allerton Building, Frederick Road, Salford, Manchester M6 6PU UK.
Public Health Rev. 2017 Jan 31;38:2. doi: 10.1186/s40985-017-0053-8. eCollection 2017.
There is a global imperative to respond to the challenge of a growing 'old-age dependency ratio' by ensuring the workforce is healthy enough to remain in work for longer. Currently more than half of older workers leave before the default retirement age, and in some countries (e.g. the UK), the time spent in retirement is increasing. At the same time across Europe, there is a gender employment gap, with 14.5% fewer female workers between 55-64 years old, and a large variation in the participation of older women in the workforce (ranging from 30-75%). As older women are under-represented in the workforce, increasing employment in this group has the propensity to go some way towards reducing the old-age dependency ratio to ensure continued economic growth.
This review explores the barriers and facilitators to extended working lives in Europe, particularly those that impact on women.
A systematic mapping review process was undertaken using four electronic databases, MEDLINE, PsychoINFO, PsychEXTRA via Ovid and AgeLine via EBSCO, using the terms, 'work', 'ageing', 'retirement', 'pension', 'old', 'barrier', 'extended working life', 'gender' and 'health and well-being'. Hand searching was also carried out in the and the .
The search resulted in 15 English language studies published from 1st January 2005 to the current date that met the inclusion criteria.
The key factors that influenced decisions to retire or extend working lives in Europe were health, social factors, workplace factors, and financial security and pension arrangements.
Health was found to be the most commonly cited barrier to extended working lives in Europe, and a number of social inequalities to work exist by gender. Structural factors exist, such as the gender pay gap, which disadvantages women, while the nature of work itself differs by gender and can have a negative impact on health. Currently, women tend to exit the labour market earlier than men; however, changes in the state pension age are resulting in women being required to work for as long as men, in most countries. For women to remain healthy at work, workplaces need to consider a range of interventions, including flexible arrangements to both work and retirement to enable women to balance the demands of work with domestic and caring responsibilities that particularly impact on them.
全球迫切需要应对“老年抚养比”不断上升的挑战,确保劳动力保持健康,以便工作更长时间。目前,超过一半的老年劳动者在法定退休年龄之前离职,在一些国家(如英国),退休时间正在增加。与此同时,在整个欧洲,存在性别就业差距,55至64岁的女性劳动者比男性少14.5%,老年女性劳动力参与率差异很大(从30%到75%不等)。由于老年女性在劳动力中的代表性不足,增加这一群体的就业有可能在一定程度上降低老年抚养比,以确保经济持续增长。
本综述探讨了欧洲延长工作寿命的障碍和促进因素,特别是那些对女性有影响的因素。
使用四个电子数据库进行系统的映射综述,即通过Ovid的MEDLINE、PsychoINFO、PsychEXTRA以及通过EBSCO的AgeLine,使用“工作”“老龄化”“退休”“养老金”“老年”“障碍”“延长工作寿命 ”“性别”以及“健康与福祉”等术语。还在[具体文献1]和[具体文献2]中进行了手工检索。
检索结果为2005年1月1日至当前日期发表的15项符合纳入标准的英文研究。
影响欧洲退休或延长工作寿命决策的关键因素是健康、社会因素、工作场所因素以及财务安全和养老金安排。
健康被认为是欧洲延长工作寿命最常被提及的障碍,并且在工作方面存在一些基于性别的社会不平等。存在一些结构性因素,如性别薪酬差距,这对女性不利,而工作本身的性质因性别而异,可能对健康产生负面影响。目前,女性往往比男性更早退出劳动力市场;然而,在大多数国家,国家养老金年龄的变化导致女性被要求与男性工作同样长的时间。为了让女性在工作中保持健康,工作场所需要考虑一系列干预措施,包括工作和退休方面的灵活安排,以使女性能够平衡工作需求与对她们影响尤其大的家庭和照料责任。