Back to Search Start Over

Trajectories in physical functioning by occupational class among retiring women: the significance of type of retirement and social and health-related factors

Authors :
Tea Lallukka
Eero Lahelma
Olli Pietiläinen
Susan Kuivalainen
Mikko Laaksonen
Ossi Rahkonen
Jouni Lahti
Department of Public Health
Helsinki Inequality Initiative (INEQ)
Center for Population, Health and Society
Clinicum
Faculty Common Matters (Faculty of Social Sciences)
Source :
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. 77:362-368
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMJ, 2023.

Abstract

Background Occupational class inequalities in physical functioning and their changes after retirement are poorly understood. We examined occupational class trajectories in physical functioning 10 years before and after transition to old-age and disability retirement. We included working conditions and behavioural risk factors as covariates, given their established link to health and retirement.Methods We used the Helsinki Health Study cohort data from surveys 2000–2002 to 2017, and included 3901 women, who were employed by the City of Helsinki, Finland, and retired during the follow-up. Mixed-effect growth curve models were used to examine changes in RAND-36 Physical Functioning subscale (range 0–100) 10 years before and after the retirement date by occupational class.Results Old-age (n=3073) and disability retirees (n=828) lacked class differences in physical functioning 10 years before retirement. By retirement transition, physical functioning declined and class inequalities emerged, the predicted scores being 86.1 (95% CI 85.2 to 86.9) for higher class and 82.2 (95% CI 81.5 to 83.0) for lower class old-age retirees, and 70.3 (95% CI 67.8 to 72.9) for higher class and 62.2 (95% CI 60.4 to 63.9) for lower class disability retirees. Physical functioning declined and class inequalities slightly widened among old-age retirees after the retirement, whereas among disability retirees the decline plateaued and class inequalities narrowed over time after retirement. Physical work and body mass index somewhat attenuated the class inequalities after adjustment.Conclusions Class inequalities in physical functioning widened after old-age retirement and narrowed after disability retirement. The examined work and health-related factors contributed weakly to the inequalities.No data are available. Data cannot be openly shared due to data protection laws and regulations. Data are available for members of the group on reasonable request, pending following the GDPR. More information is available at the project website (data protection statement):https://www.helsinki.fi/en/researchgroups/helsinki-health-study/data-protection-statement.

Details

ISSN :
14702738 and 0143005X
Volume :
77
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f61e942c4138f30cc9d9642140fb950