Frank Richard G, Glied Sherry A M, Shields Morgan
Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston (Frank); Wagner School of Public Service, New York University, New York (Glied); Department of Psychiatry, and Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (Shields).
Psychiatr Serv. 2021 Feb 1;72(2):143-147. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.202000243. Epub 2020 Sep 23.
For individuals with serious mental illness, work can play an important role in improving quality of life and community integration. Since the 1960s, demand has shifted away from routine cognitive (e.g., clerical work) and manual skills (warehouse picking and packing) toward nonroutine analytical (computer coding), interpersonal (nursing), and manual skills (home health attendant). This study aimed to determine whether individuals with serious mental illness are likely to hold the types of jobs that are in decline and to assess their ability to compete for the types of jobs that have been in increased demand.
Using data from the National Health Interview Survey and the Occupational Information Network database on occupational skills (N=387,240 person-year responses), this study explored changes in patterns of employment from 1997 to 2017 for people with mental illnesses.
Individuals with any mental health condition experienced a 10.9 percentage point decline in employment in jobs requiring routine cognitive or any manual skills. Much of this decline was offset by an increase in employment in jobs involving nonroutine cognitive skills. However, individuals with serious psychological distress experienced a 7.9 percentage point decline in employment in jobs requiring routine cognitive or any manual skills, and about 75% of this decline coincided with reduced levels of employment rather than a shift toward employment in nonroutine cognitive jobs. These patterns were more striking among men.
Likely directions for interventions include renewed efforts at workplace accommodations, greater investment in evidence-based return-to-work programs, and efforts to popularize early intervention programs.
对于患有严重精神疾病的个体而言,工作在改善生活质量和促进社区融入方面可发挥重要作用。自20世纪60年代以来,就业需求已从常规认知技能(如文职工作)和体力技能(仓库挑选和包装)转向非常规分析技能(计算机编码)、人际技能(护理)和体力技能(家庭健康护理员)。本研究旨在确定患有严重精神疾病的个体是否更有可能从事正在减少的工作类型,并评估他们竞争需求增加的工作类型的能力。
利用来自国家健康访谈调查和职业信息网络数据库中关于职业技能的数据(N = 387,240人年回复),本研究探讨了1997年至2017年期间患有精神疾病者的就业模式变化。
患有任何心理健康状况的个体在需要常规认知技能或任何体力技能的工作中的就业率下降了10.9个百分点。这种下降很大程度上被涉及非常规认知技能工作的就业增加所抵消。然而,患有严重心理困扰的个体在需要常规认知技能或任何体力技能的工作中的就业率下降了7.9个百分点,并且这种下降的约75%与就业水平降低相吻合,而非转向非常规认知工作的就业。这些模式在男性中更为明显。
可能的干预方向包括在工作场所提供便利方面重新做出努力、加大对循证重返工作计划的投资以及努力推广早期干预计划。