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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Working hours and sleep duration in midlife as determinants of health-related quality of life among older businessmen

Timo E. StrandbergTimo E. StrandbergArto Y. StrandbergKaisu H. PitkäläTimo TörmäkangasMikaela B. Von BonsdorffMonika E. Von Bonsdorff

subject

MaleGerontologyAgingTime FactorsHealth StatusVitalityOccupational safety and healtholder peopleDisability Evaluation0302 clinical medicineQuality of lifeRisk FactorsSurveys and QuestionnairesMedicine030212 general & internal medicineProspective cohort studyFinlandSmokingAge Factorsta3142General MedicineMiddle AgedSleep in non-human animalshealth-related quality of lifeJob Descriptionworking hoursSF-36Personnel Staffing and SchedulingWorkloadWhite People03 medical and health sciencesvammaisuusSex FactorsHumansSocial determinants of healthOccupational HealthAgedbusiness.industryConfidence intervaltyöaikaikääntyminendisabilityageingLinear ModelsQuality of Lifesleep durationGeriatrics and GerontologySleepbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgery

description

Background long working hours and short sleep duration are associated with a range of adverse health consequences. However, the combined effect of these two exposures on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) has not been investigated. Methods we studied white men born between 1919 and 1934 in the Helsinki Businessmen Study (HBS, initial n = 3,490). Data on clinical variables, self-rated health (SRH), working hours and sleep duration in 1974, and RAND-36 (SF-36) HRQoL survey in the year 2000 were available for 1,527 men. Follow-up time was 26 years. By combining working hours and sleep duration, four categories were formed: (i) normal work (≤50 hours/week) and normal sleep (>47 hours/week); (ii) long work (>50 hours/week) and normal sleep; (iii) normal work and short sleep (≤47 hours/week); and (iv) long work and short sleep. The association with RAND-36 domains was examined using multiple linear regression models adjusted for age, smoking and SRH. Results compared to those with normal work and sleep in midlife, men with long work and short sleep had poorer RAND-36 scores for physical functioning, vitality and general health, and those with long work and normal sleep had poorer scores for physical functioning in old age. Adjustment for midlife smoking and SRH attenuated the associations, but the one for long work and short sleep and physical functioning remained significant (difference in mean physical functioning score −4.58, 95% confidence interval −9.00 to −0.15). Conclusion businessmen who had long working hours coupled with short sleep duration in midlife had poorer physical health in old age. peerReviewed

10.1093/ageing/afw178http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afw178