EVIDENCE-BASED POLICY AND PRACTICE
Job loss from poor health, smoking and obesity: a national prospective survey in France
1 Institut de Recherche et Documentation en Economie de la Santé (IRDES), Paris, France
2 Institut National dEtudes Démographiques (INED), Paris, France
Correspondence to:
Dr Florence Jusot, IRDES, 10 rue Vauvenargues Paris, 75018, France; jusot{at}irdes.fr
Background and objectives: Health selection into unemployment may be either direct or operate by reference to health-related behaviours rather than health per se (indirect selection). Panel data are desirable to investigate selection effects, and the two types of selection processes may be concurrent. We examine jointly the roles of health and health-related behaviours as precursors of unemployment, in order to disentangle direct from indirect selection processes.
Design: The data of a multi-round nationally representative health survey in France were analysed longitudinally, based on three data collection rounds: 1992–5, 1996–8 and 2000–2. Following employees salaried in the private sector and aged 30–54 years at baseline, we explored through logistic regression the influence of non-optimal self-rated health, smoking and obesity on the risk of being found unemployed 4 years later.
Results: After adjustment for self-rated health, obesity was found to be a significant precursor of unemployment in women, and heavy smoking had that role in men. After adjustment for smoking and obesity, poor health at baseline was found to be a significant precursor of unemployment in both genders.
Conclusion: Those findings confirm the intrinsic role of poor health and of health-related behaviours as precursors of unemployment, with gender-specific patterns for the latter. Public policy prescriptions regarding employees protection from job insecurities should integrate appropriate accommodations of health limitations, and the personal factors underlying unfavourable work and health behaviours should be investigated, in order to thwart indirect selection phenomena.
Relevant Article
- In this issue
- Carlos Alvarez-Dardet and John Ashton
J Epidemiol Community Health 2008 62: 281.[Extract] [Full Text] [PDF]
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Zagozdzon, P., Zaborski, L., Ejsmont, J.
(2009). Survival and cause-specific mortality among unemployed individuals in Poland during economic transition. J Public Health (Oxf)
31: 138-146
[Abstract] [Full Text] -
Bambra, C, Eikemo, T A
(2009). Welfare state regimes, unemployment and health: a comparative study of the relationship between unemployment and self-reported health in 23 European countries. J. Epidemiol. Community Health
63: 92-98
[Abstract] [Full Text]
Register for free content
The full back archive is now available for all BMJ Journals. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006 right back to volume 1 issue 1. Register here to access the free archive of all BMJ Journals.
Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.
