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. 2014 May 29;9(5):e98620.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0098620. eCollection 2014.

Non-employment histories of middle-aged men and women who died from alcohol-related causes: a longitudinal retrospective study

Affiliations

Non-employment histories of middle-aged men and women who died from alcohol-related causes: a longitudinal retrospective study

Tapio Paljärvi et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Background: Long-term patterning of non-employment among problem drinkers is poorly understood. We determined the level and timing of non-employment, and the relative contribution of various types of non-employment among middle-aged persons who died of alcohol-related causes.

Methods: We conducted a longitudinal retrospective register-based study of Finnish men and women aged 45-64 years who died of alcohol-related causes (n = 15,552) or other causes (n = 39,166) in the period 2000-07, or who survived (n = 204,422) until the end of 2007. We traced back the number of days in employment and non-employment for up to 17 years before death or before the end of the study period for the survivors.

Results: The majority (≥56%) of persons who died of alcohol-related causes were in employment up to ten years before death. Over the 17-year period before death, those who died of alcohol-related causes were in employment on average two years less (mean 6.3 years, 95%CI 6.2-6.4) than those dying of other causes (8.2, 8.1-8.3), and five years less than survivors (11.6, 11.5-11.7), when sex and age were adjusted for. The relative role of various types of non-employment differed markedly across the two mortality groups. Among those who died of alcohol-related causes, unemployment accounted for 54% of the total burden of non-employment, in comparison with 29% among those who died of other causes. In contrast, disability pension accounted for 41% of the total burden of non-employment among those who died of alcohol-related causes, but 65% among those who died of other causes.

Conclusions: The results indicate the feasibility of preventing movement out of employment among middle-aged men and women with severe alcohol-related harm, provided that they are identified early on during their working careers and offered effective interventions.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Flow chart of the study population.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Proportion of men and women in employment at a given year before death/end of study period.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Average annual number of days of employment and non-employment.
Sex and age adjusted average annual number of days of A) employment, B) total non-employment, C) unemployment, D) medically certified sick leave, and E) disability pension in the preceding 17 years before death/end of study period for those who died of alcohol-related causes, other causes, and for those who survived the 17-year period.
Figure 4
Figure 4. Average annual number of days of non-employment by cause of death.
Sex and age adjusted average annual number of days of unemployment, disability pension, and sick leave over the 17-year study period separately by major cause-of-death groups. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals.

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