Centre for Disability Research, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YT, UK.
Centre for Disability Research and Policy, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, 2006, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2018 Mar 27;18(1):401. doi: 10.1186/s12889-018-5337-5.
There exists a well established link between employment status and health, with unemployment being associated with poorer health. Much less is known about the association between economic inactivity and health, especially among people with disabilities. Our aim is to determine whether the association between employment status and health is similar for adults with and adults without intellectual impairment.
Using nationally representative data from the 1970 British Cohort Study, we undertook a series of cross sectional analyses of the association between employment status and health (self-reported general health, mental health) among British adults with and without intellectual impairments at ages 26, 30, 34, 38 and 42.
People with intellectual disability and borderline intellectual functioning had markedly lower employment rates and poorer health than other participants at all waves of data collection. When compared with participants in full-time employment the prevalence of poorer self rated health and mental health was higher among participants with and without intellectual impairment who were in either part-time employment or were economically inactive at all ages. When compared with participants in employment the prevalence of poorer self rated health and mental health was higher among participants with and without intellectual impairment who were in the economically inactive categories of unemployment, education/training and ill/disabled at all ages. Intellectual disability status appeared to moderate the strength of the relationship between economic activity and self-rated health and, to a much lesser extent, the relationship between economic activity and mental health. In all instances the moderation indicated a stronger association among participants without intellectual impairment.
The results provide substantive evidence to suggest that the nature of the well-established association between employment and better health is similar for British adults with and without intellectual impairments. The results do, however, indicate that the magnitude of the effect involved differed. Further research is needed to identify mechanisms that may underlie this difference.
就业状况与健康之间存在着密切的联系,失业与健康状况较差有关。然而,人们对经济活动与健康之间的关系知之甚少,尤其是在残疾人群体中。我们的目的是确定就业状况与健康之间的关系在智力障碍成年人和非智力障碍成年人中是否相似。
利用来自 1970 年英国队列研究的全国代表性数据,我们对英国成年人在智力障碍和非智力障碍的情况下,在 26 岁、30 岁、34 岁、38 岁和 42 岁时,就业状况与健康(自我报告的总体健康状况、心理健康状况)之间的关系进行了一系列横断面分析。
在所有数据收集阶段,智力障碍和边缘智力障碍者的就业率明显较低,健康状况也比其他参与者差。与从事全职工作的参与者相比,在所有年龄段,从事兼职工作或经济不活跃的智力障碍和非智力障碍者自我报告健康状况和心理健康状况较差的比例更高。与就业参与者相比,在所有年龄段,失业、教育/培训和患病/残疾等经济不活跃类别的智力障碍和非智力障碍者自我报告健康状况和心理健康状况较差的比例更高。智力障碍状况似乎缓和了经济活动与自我报告健康状况之间关系的强度,在较小程度上也缓和了经济活动与心理健康状况之间关系的强度。在所有情况下,智力障碍状况的存在使非智力障碍参与者之间的关联更为紧密。
研究结果提供了实质性证据,表明就业与健康状况之间的关系在英国智力障碍成年人和非智力障碍成年人中是相似的。然而,结果确实表明,所涉及的效应幅度不同。需要进一步研究以确定可能导致这种差异的机制。