434 articles – 313 Notices  [english version]
Fiche concise
All-cause and diagnosis-specific sickness absence as a predictor of sustained suboptimal health: a 14-year follow-up in the GAZEL cohort.
Vahtera J., Westerlund H., Ferrie J. E., Head J., Melchior M., Singh-Manoux A., Zins M., Goldberg M., Alexanderson K., Kivimaki M.
J Epidemiol Community Health 64, 4 (2010) 311-7 - http://www.hal.inserm.fr/inserm-00425550
 (19679706) 
All-cause and diagnosis-specific sickness absence as a predictor of sustained suboptimal health: a 14-year follow-up in the GAZEL cohort.
Jussi Vahtera () 1, 2, Hugo Westerlund3, Jane Ferrie4, Jenny Head4, Maria Melchior5, Archana Singh-Manoux5, Marie Zins5, Marcel Goldberg5, 6, Kristina Alexanderson7, Mika Kivimaki1, 4
1 :  Unit of Excellence for Psychosocial Factors
Finnish Institute of Occupational Health
Lemminkäisenkatu 14-18 B, FI-20520 Turku
Finlande
2 :  Department of Public Health
University of Turku – Turku University Hospital
Turku
Finlande
3 :  Stress Research Institute
Stockholm University
SE-106 91, Stockholm
Suède
4 :  Department of Epidemiology and Public Health
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/epidemiology/staff/singh-manoux.htm
University College of London (UCL)
1-19 Torrington Place London WC1E 6BT
Royaume-Uni
5 :  Santé publique et épidémiologie des déterminants professionnels et sociaux de la santé
http://www.u687.idf.inserm.fr/
INSERM : U687 – IFR69 – Université Paris XI - Paris Sud – Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines
Hôpital Paul Brousse 16, av Paul Vaillant Couturier 94807 VILLEJUIF
France
6 :  DST-InVS - Département santé travail
Institut de Veille Sanitaire
12, rue du Val d'Osne 94415 Saint-Maurice Cedex
France
7 :  Section of Personal Injury Prevention
Karolinska Institutet
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Stockholm
Suède
background: Previous studies show that sickness absence predicts health, but it is unclear whether this association is persistent over time and whether specific diseases underlie long-term associations. The aim of this study was to investigate overall and diagnosis-specific sickness absences as predictors of sustained suboptimal health. METHODS: Prospective occupational cohort study of 15 320 employees (73% men) aged 37-51. Sickness absence records in 1990-1992, including 13 diagnostic categories, were examined in relation to self-rated health measured annually for the years 1993-2006. RESULTS: 3385 employees (22%) had >30 days of sickness absence and 5564 (36%) 1-30 days during the 3-year exposure window. Repeated-measures logistic regression analysis adjusted for age, sex, occupational status and chronic diseases show that employees with >30 absence days, compared with those with no absences, had 2.14 (95% CI 2.00 to 2.29) times higher odds for suboptimal health over the 14 years of follow-up. Retirement did not dilute this association. Nine sickness absence diagnostic categories, such as diseases of the nervous, circulatory, metabolic, musculoskeletal, sensory and gastrointestinal systems, cancer, mental disorders and external causes, independently predicted increased risk of sustained suboptimal health. CONCLUSIONS: There is a remarkably persistent association between sickness absence and future long-term self-rated health status for the majority of diagnostic categories for sickness absence. This suggests that the association between sickness absence and health is ubiquitous and not driven by a limited number of rare and severe diseases.
Sciences du Vivant/Santé publique et épidémiologie
Anglais
1470-2738

Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture
10.1136/jech.2008.083923
J Epidemiol Community Health
internationale
04/2010
13/08/2009
64
4
311-7

Sickness absence – self-rated health – longitudinal – multi-level – occupational
Liste des fichiers attachés à ce document : 
DOC
Vathera_et_al_JECH_2008_SAbs_Health_trajectory_GAZEL.doc(270 KB)
PDF
Vathera_et_al_JECH_2008_SAbs_Health_trajectory_GAZEL.pdf(107.6 KB)
inserm-00425550_edited.pdf(118.9 KB)
XHTML
index.xhtml(57.9 KB)