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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Can a Healthy Lifestyle Prevent Disability Pension among Female Healthcare Workers with Good and Poor Self-Rated Health? Prospective Cohort Study with 11-Year Register Follow-Up

ÁLvaro MoreraJoaquin CalatayudRubén López-buenoJosé CasañaJonas VinstrupRúni BláfossThomas ClausenLars Louis Andersen

subject

Assegurances d'invalidesahealthcare workersHealth PersonnelHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthphysical activitySalut en el treballExercicidisability pensionssmokingPensionsBMITabaquismeRisk FactorsHumansDisabled PersonsFemaledisability pensions; healthcare workers; smoking; physical activity; BMIHealthy LifestyleProspective StudiesFollow-Up Studies

description

BACKGROUND: Our purpose was to investigate whether healthy lifestyle habits prevent disability pension among female healthcare workers.METHODS: We conducted a prospective cohort study with an 11-year register follow-up in which 8159 female healthcare workers from Denmark completed a questionnaire concerning self-rated health, work environment, leisure-time physical activity (LTPA), smoking, and body mass index (BMI). Data on disability benefit payments were obtained from the Danish Register for Evaluation of Marginalization during an 11-year follow-up. Potential confounders included age, occupational education, psychosocial work factors, and physical exertion during work.RESULTS: Among workers in good health at baseline, smoking, obesity, and low levels of LTPA were risk factors for disability pension during 11-year follow-up. Among workers with poor health, only low levels of physical activity were a risk factor for disability pension.CONCLUSIONS: This underscores the importance of a healthy lifestyle, specially being physically active, for preventing premature exit from the labor market in female healthcare workers.

https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710631