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      Unemployment and retirement and ill-health: a cross-sectional analysis across European countries

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          Abstract

          Objective

          To determine the associations between different measures of health and labor market position across ten European countries.

          Methods

          We studied 11,462 participants of the Survey on Health and Ageing in Europe (SHARE) who were 50–64 years old. Logistic regression was used to calculate the associations between health and other determinants and being retired, unemployed, or a homemaker.

          Results

          A large variation across European countries was observed for the proportion of persons 50–65 years with paid employment, varying among men from 42% in Austria to 75% in Sweden and among women from 22% in Italy to 69% in Sweden. Among employed workers 18% reported a poor health, whereas this proportion was 37% in retirees, 39% in unemployed persons, and 35% in homemakers. A perceived poor health was strongly associated with non-participating in labor force in most European countries. A lower education, being single, physical inactivity and a high body mass index were associated with withdrawal from the labor force. Long-term illnesses such as depression, stroke, diabetes, chronic lung disease, and musculoskeletal disease were significantly more common among those persons not having paid employment.

          Conclusion

          In many European countries a poor health, chronic diseases, and lifestyle factors were associated with being out of the labor market. The results of this study suggest that in social policies to encourage employment among older persons the role of ill-health and its influencing factors needs to be incorporated.

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          Most cited references21

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          Self-rated health and mortality: a review of twenty-seven community studies.

          We examine the growing number of studies of survey respondents' global self-ratings of health as predictors of mortality in longitudinal studies of representative community samples. Twenty-seven studies in U.S. and international journals show impressively consistent findings. Global self-rated health is an independent predictor of mortality in nearly all of the studies, despite the inclusion of numerous specific health status indicators and other relevant covariates known to predict mortality. We summarize and review these studies, consider various interpretations which could account for the association, and suggest several approaches to the next stage of research in this field.
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            Unemployment and ill health: understanding the relationship.

            To review research relevant to understanding the psychological, social, and biological pathways by which unemployment may affect health risk; to consider the importance of four specific mechanisms; and to indicate some directions for future research. Studies were chosen to illustrate the development of four major hypotheses regarding the relationship between unemployment and ill health, as well as the present state of knowledge. The review therefore includes some much-cited "classics" drawn from a long time span. Where recent reviews already exist relevant to individual mechanisms, these are referred to. Recent (since 1987) reports were sought by searching the BIDS data base. Particular effort was made to locate studies which enabled alternative hypotheses to be evaluated, and to point out where existing evidence is inconsistent or incomplete, indicating the need for further research. To understand the relationship between unemployment and ill health and mortality, four mechanisms need to be considered: the role of relative poverty; social isolation and loss of self esteem; health related behaviour (including that associated with membership of certain types of "subculture"); and the effect that a spell of unemployment has on subsequent employment patterns.
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              The effect of unemployment on mental health

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +31-10-4638469 , +31-10-4638474 , a.burdorf@erasmusmc.nl
                Journal
                Int Arch Occup Environ Health
                International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health
                Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0340-0131
                1432-1246
                9 February 2008
                October 2008
                : 82
                : 1
                : 39-45
                Affiliations
                Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, P.O. Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands
                Article
                304
                10.1007/s00420-008-0304-6
                2467501
                18264715
                6aa75285-9297-44ed-a773-f0620db4d98d
                © The Author(s) 2008
                History
                : 6 June 2006
                : 11 January 2008
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag 2008

                Occupational & Environmental medicine
                retirement,lifestyle,self-perceived health,chronic disease,unemployment

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