Work-related health risks in Europe: Are older workers more vulnerable?

被引:39
作者
Jones, Melanie K. [1 ]
Latreille, Paul L. [2 ,3 ]
Sloane, Peter J. [1 ,3 ,4 ]
Staneva, Anita V. [1 ]
机构
[1] Swansea Univ, Swansea, W Glam, Wales
[2] Univ Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, S Yorkshire, England
[3] IZA, Bonn, Germany
[4] Flinders Univ S Australia, Natl Inst Labour Studies, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia
关键词
Europe; Mental health; Physical health; Absence; Fatigue; Endogeneity; Healthy worker selection effect; OCCUPATIONAL ACCIDENTS; AGE-DIFFERENCES; SELECTION; EXPERIENCE; WORKPLACE; INJURIES;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.03.027
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Recent policy reforms in a number of countries are extending working lives and deferring the statutory retirement age. Yet such changes may have profound implications for the well-being of older workers if such individuals are more likely to suffer work-related health problems. Using international data from the European Working Conditions Survey for 2005, we test whether older workers (aged 55-65 years) differ significantly from younger workers across a range of self-reported job-related indicators including health risk perception, mental and physical health, sickness absence, injury and fatigue. We estimate discrete choice (probit) models of the outcomes above for a sample comprising 17,459 individuals in 23 countries, and control for personal, job and work characteristics including exposure to physical, ergonomic and psychosocial risk factors. Our results show that failure to account for both endogeneity and the 'healthy worker effect' (sample selection) can lead to misleading inferences. The latter is especially important: only after controlling for selection bias (using a re-weighting approach) do we find older workers are more 'vulnerable' than their younger counterparts in the sense of being significantly more likely to perceive each of the various adverse health outcomes above, with the exception of injury. For the remaining indicators, our estimates suggest the magnitude of this difference is substantial: between 5 and 11 percentage points compared with prime age workers, and 8 and 14 points relative to workers aged 15-35, depending on the measure under consideration. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:18 / 29
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Microaggressive Stress and Identity Trauma: The Work-Related Mental Health Risks of LGBTQ+ Music Teachers
    Smith, Tawnya D.
    BULLETIN OF THE COUNCIL FOR RESEARCH IN MUSIC EDUCATION, 2023, (238) : 7 - 22
  • [32] Work-Related Factors of Presenteeism: The Mediating Role of Mental and Physical Health
    Pohling, Rico
    Buruck, Gabriele
    Jungbauer, Kevin-Lim
    Leiter, Michael P.
    JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 21 (02) : 220 - 234
  • [33] Resilience Training for Work-Related Stress Among Health Care Workers: Results of a Randomized Clinical Trial Comparing In-Person and Smartphone-Delivered Interventions
    Mistretta, Erin G.
    Davis, Mary C.
    Temkit, M'hamed
    Lorenz, Christopher
    Darby, Betty
    Stonnington, Cynthia M.
    JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2018, 60 (06) : 559 - 568
  • [34] How Does the Statutory Retirement Age Affect Older workers' Employment in Relation to Individual and Work-Related Factors?
    Grzenda, Wioletta
    JOURNAL OF AGING & SOCIAL POLICY, 2023,
  • [35] Flourishing in New Zealand Workers Associations With Lifestyle Behaviors, Physical Health, Psychosocial, and Work-Related Indicators
    Hone, Lucy C.
    Jarden, Aaron
    Duncan, Scott
    Schofield, Grant M.
    JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2015, 57 (09) : 973 - 983
  • [36] Ethnicity, work-related stress and subjective reports of health by migrant workers: a multi-dimensional model
    Capasso, Roberto
    Zurlo, Maria Clelia
    Smith, Andrew P.
    ETHNICITY & HEALTH, 2018, 23 (02) : 174 - 193
  • [37] Which workers are more vulnerable to work intensification? An analysis of two national surveys
    Le Fevre, Mark
    Boxall, Peter
    Macky, Keith
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER, 2015, 36 (06) : 966 - 983
  • [38] Upper airway symptoms among workers with work-related respiratory complaints
    Miedinger, D.
    Gautrin, D.
    Castano, R.
    OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE-OXFORD, 2012, 62 (06): : 427 - 434
  • [39] Reducing social inequalities in health: work-related strategies
    Siegrist, J
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2002, 30 (03) : 49 - 53
  • [40] The Construct Validity of the Work-Related Flow Inventory in a Sample of Australian Workers
    Happell, Brenda
    Gaskin, Cadeyrn J.
    Platania-Phung, Chris
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 149 (01) : 42 - 62