Longest held occupation in a lifetime and risk of disability in activities of daily living
Chung-Yi Lia, Shwu Chong Wub, Shi Wu Wenc
a Department of Public
Health, College of Medicine, Fu-Jen Catholic University, Taipei Hsien,
Taiwan, b Institute of Health Policy
and Management and Center for Health Policy Research, College of Public
Health, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, c Bureau of Reproductive and Child Health, Centre
for Disease Control, Health Canada, Ottawa, Canada
Correspondence to: Dr Chung-Yi Li chungyi{at}mails.fju.edu.tw
Accepted 14 April 2000
OBJECTIVES
To examine
the association between the longest held occupation in a lifetime and
risk of disability in activities of daily living (ADL) among elderly
people (65 years and older) in northern Taiwan.
METHODS
A case-control
design was used nested within two cohorts of a total of 2198 elderly
people who had been followed up either between 1993 and 1997 or between
1996 and 1997. Cases were 360 elderly people with ADL disability within
the study period. For each case, two sex matched controls were randomly
sampled from the pool of elderly people free from ADL disability.
Occupational data were collected through interviews conducted in 1997. Performed job contents were classified into occupational categories and occupation based social classes. Unconditional logistic regression techniques were used to estimate relative risk and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) of ADL disability.
RESULTS
Compared with
people who were former legislators, government administrators, or
business executives and managers, workers in agriculture, animal
husbandry, forestry, or fishing (odds ratio (OR) 1.9, 95% CI 1.1 to
3.5) and workers in craft and related trades (OR 1.9, 95% CI 1.1 to
3.4) had significantly increased risks of subsequent ADL disability.
Differential risks of ADL disability were found across social classes,
with a significant dose-response trend in which unskilled blue collar
workers had an 1.8 times higher risk of ADL disability than higher
social classes of white collar workers.
CONCLUSIONS
After
adjustment for education, there was still an inverse relation between
risk of ADL disability and social class. Although total control for all
the known risk factors for ADL disability among elderly people was
impossible, the results tend to suggest a potential for an effect of
longest held occupation in a lifetime on risk of ADL disability.
Keywords: activity of daily living; occupation; socioeconomic status
© 2000 by Occupational and Environmental Medicine
This article has been cited by other articles:
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(2006). Lifetime occupation and physical function: a prospective cohort study on persons aged 80 years and older living in a community.. Occup. Environ. Med.
63: 438-442
[Abstract] [Full Text]
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