Department of Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam Public Health research institute, VU University Medical Center, Van der Boechorststraat 7, 1081, BT, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Body@Work, Research Center on Physical Activity, Work and Health, TNO-VU/VUmc, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
BMC Public Health. 2018 Feb 17;18(1):265. doi: 10.1186/s12889-018-5151-0.
An increasing number of retirees continue to work beyond retirement despite being eligible to retire. As the prevalence of chronic disease increases with age, working beyond retirement may go along with having a chronic disease. Working beyond retirement may be different for retirees with and without chronic disease. We aim to investigate whether demographic, socioeconomic and work characteristics, health and social factors predict working beyond retirement, in workers with and without a chronic disease.
Employees aged 56-64 years were selected from the Study on Transitions in Employment, Ability and Motivation (N = 1125). Questionnaire data on demographic and work characteristics, health, social factors, and working beyond retirement were linked to registry data from Statistics Netherlands on socioeconomic characteristics. Separate prediction models were built for retirees with and without chronic disease using multivariate logistic regression analyses.
Workers without chronic disease were more likely to work beyond retirement compared to workers with chronic disease (27% vs 23%). In retirees with chronic disease, work and health factors predicted working beyond retirement, while in retirees without a chronic disease, work, health and social factors predicted working beyond retirement. In the final model for workers with chronic disease, healthcare work, better physical health, higher body height, lower physical load and no permanent contract were positively predictive of working beyond retirement. In the final model for workers without chronic disease, feeling full of life and being intensively physically active for > = 2 days per week were positively predictive of working beyond retirement; while manual labor, better recovery, and a partner who did not support working until the statutory retirement age, were negatively predictive of working beyond retirement.
Work and health factors independently predicted working beyond retirement in workers with and without chronic disease, whereas social factors only did so among workers without chronic disease. Demographic and socioeconomic characteristics did not independently contribute to prediction of working beyond retirement in any group. As prediction of working beyond retirement was more difficult among workers with a chronic disease, future research is needed in this group.
尽管已达到退休年龄,但越来越多的退休人员选择继续工作。随着年龄的增长,慢性病的发病率逐渐增加,因此退休后继续工作可能伴随着患有慢性病。退休后继续工作对于患有和不患有慢性病的退休人员来说可能有所不同。我们旨在研究人口统计学、社会经济学和工作特征、健康和社会因素是否可以预测患有和不患有慢性病的退休人员继续工作的情况。
从就业、能力和动机研究(Study on Transitions in Employment, Ability and Motivation)中选择年龄在 56-64 岁的员工(N=1125)。使用多变量逻辑回归分析,将问卷中关于人口统计学和工作特征、健康、社会因素以及退休后工作的数据与荷兰统计局关于社会经济学特征的登记数据相链接。为患有和不患有慢性病的退休人员分别建立预测模型。
与患有慢性病的退休人员相比(23%),没有慢性病的退休人员更有可能继续工作(27%)。在患有慢性病的退休人员中,工作和健康因素预测了退休后的工作情况,而在没有慢性病的退休人员中,工作、健康和社会因素预测了退休后的工作情况。在患有慢性病的退休人员的最终模型中,医疗保健工作、更好的身体健康状况、更高的身高、更低的体力负荷和没有固定合同与退休后继续工作呈正相关。在没有慢性病的退休人员的最终模型中,生活充实和每周至少两天积极进行体力活动与退休后继续工作呈正相关;而体力劳动、更好的恢复能力和不支持工作到法定退休年龄的伴侣与退休后继续工作呈负相关。
工作和健康因素独立预测了患有和不患有慢性病的退休人员退休后的工作情况,而社会因素仅在没有慢性病的退休人员中具有预测作用。人口统计学和社会经济学特征在任何一组中都不能独立预测退休后的工作情况。由于对患有慢性病的退休人员进行退休后工作预测更为困难,因此需要对该人群进行进一步研究。