Do working conditions explain the increased risks of disability pension among men and women with low education? A follow-up of Swedish cohorts
swedish cohort
Adult
Male
Parents
Adolescent
Physical Exertion
men
jem
intellectual performance
psychiatric diagnosis
Cohort Studies
Disability Evaluation
Pensions
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Risk Factors
Occupational Exposure
cohort study
Humans
musculoskeletal disorder
Disabled Persons
Professional Autonomy
Musculoskeletal Diseases
10. No inequality
job control
disability pension
education
sweden
Mental Disorders
study ambition
Middle Aged
job exposure matrix
confounding
musculoskeletal diagnosis
disability
physical strain
8. Economic growth
working condition
Educational Status
Female
women
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Goals
Follow-Up Studies
DOI:
10.5271/sjweh.3441
Publication Date:
2014-06-17T02:54:24Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Rates of disability pension are greatly increased among people with low education. This study examines the extent to which associations between education and disability pensions might be explained by differences in working conditions. Information on individuals at age 13 years was used to assess confounding of associations.Two nationally representative samples of men and women born in 1948 and 1953 in Sweden (22 889 participants in total) were linked to information from social insurance records on cause (musculoskeletal, psychiatric, and other) and date (from 1986-2008) of disability pension. Education data were obtained from administrative records. Occupation data were used for measurement of physical strain at work and job control. Data on paternal education, ambition to study, and intellectual performance were collected in school.Women were found to have higher rates of disability pension than men, regardless of diagnosis, whereas men had a steeper increase in disability pension by declining educational level. Adjustment of associations for paternal education, ambition to study, and intellectual performance at age 13 had a considerable attenuating effect, also when disability pension with a musculoskeletal diagnosis was the outcome. Despite this, high physical strain at work and low job control both contributed to explain the associations between low education and disability pensions in multivariable models.Working conditions seem to partly explain the increased rate of disability pension among men and women with lower education even though this association does reflect considerable selection effects based on factors already present in late childhood.
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