Aim: To identify working life patterns after sickness absence (SA) due to depression and sociodemographic, work, and health-related factors associated with them.
Methods: The study cohort included 9139 Swedish residents, aged 25-40, with a new SA spell due to depression in 2005. We followed the cohort for 15 years analyzing their yearly dominant labor market outcomes.
Study Objectives: Implementation of electronic health record biobanks has facilitated linkage between clinical and questionnaire data and enabled assessments of relationships between sleep health and diseases in phenome-wide association studies (PheWAS). In the Mass General Brigham Biobank, a large health system-based study, we aimed to systematically catalog associations between time in bed, sleep timing, and weekly variability with clinical phenotypes derived from ICD-9/10 codes.
Methods: Self-reported habitual bed and wake times were used to derive variables: short (<7 hours) and long (≥9 hours) time in bed, sleep midpoint, social jetlag, and sleep debt.