Department of Neuro Medicine and Movement Science, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, NTNU-Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway.
Spinal Cord Unit, Department Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, St Olav's University Hospital, Trondheim, Norway.
Spinal Cord. 2020 Feb;58(2):224-231. doi: 10.1038/s41393-019-0356-3. Epub 2019 Oct 1.
Cross sectional survey of 1055 persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) in Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland.
(1) To analyse the employment levels of people of working age with SCI, including possible gender differences. (2) To study the relevance of occupational class before SCI and its impact on employment and occupational class after SCI.
Members of national SCI consumer associations.
Employment status and social mobility after SCI was regressed on occupational class before SCI, using multinomial and binary logistic regression analysis of employment, while controlling for other explanatory variables to employment after SCI and demographic characteristics.
Employment levels after injury were similar for men and women in each of the four nations, but Dutch women had significantly lower scores on predicted employment than Dutch men. Employment and social mobility trajectories were heavily in favour of middle-class occupations. Gender differences in employment status at the time of study primarily occurred among those in working-class occupations before SCI, with men less likely than women of being non-employed. Working-class men were significantly more likely than working-class women to retain a working-class occupation at the time of study, and although non-significant, to attain a middle-class occupation after SCI.
There was little variation in employment by gender within and across countries but significant differences between working-class and middle-class occupations before and after injury. The results suggest that targeted employment measures should be particularly invested in the rehabilitation of women in working-class occupations.
丹麦、荷兰、挪威和瑞士的 1055 名脊髓损伤(SCI)患者的横断面调查。
(1)分析有工作能力的 SCI 患者的就业水平,包括可能存在的性别差异。(2)研究 SCI 前的职业类别及其对 SCI 后就业和职业类别的相关性。
国家 SCI 消费者协会成员。
使用多项和二元逻辑回归分析就业情况,将 SCI 前的职业类别与就业后的就业状况和社会流动性进行回归,同时控制其他对就业后和人口统计学特征的解释变量。
在四个国家中,男性和女性在受伤后的就业水平相似,但荷兰女性在预测就业方面的得分明显低于荷兰男性。就业和社会流动轨迹严重倾向于中产阶级职业。在研究时的就业状况存在性别差异,主要发生在 SCI 前从事工人阶级职业的人群中,男性比女性更不可能没有工作。与女性相比,男性工人阶级更有可能在研究时保留工人阶级职业,尽管不显著,但在 SCI 后更有可能获得中产阶级职业。
在不同国家和国家内部,性别对就业的影响差异不大,但在受伤前后的工人阶级和中产阶级职业之间存在显著差异。结果表明,应特别针对工人阶级职业的女性制定有针对性的就业措施。