AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how having arthritis affects sickness absence and job transitions (like moving to long-term sick leave or early retirement) in employees aged 50 and older in the UK, compared to those without arthritis.
  • Data from 10 years of the UK Household Longitudinal Survey (2009-2019) was analyzed, revealing that employees with arthritis have significantly higher rates of sickness absences and transitions to long-term sick leave and early retirement, but no higher rate of unemployment.
  • The findings suggest a need for further research on the implications of these transitions for individuals and employers, as well as potential solutions to support employees with arthritis in maintaining their work participation.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To assess sickness absence and transitions from employment for employees with arthritis compared with employees without arthritis over time.

Methods: We use 10 waves of the UK Household Longitudinal Survey (2009-2019). The sample (n=38 928) comprises employees aged 50 years to state retirement age. Arthritis was self-reported and could refer to people with conditions under the umbrella term 'inflammatory arthritis' or osteoarthritis (hereafter 'arthritis'). Weighted random-effects multivariable linear probability models were estimated for two employment-related measures (1) sickness absence and (2) transitions from employment to: (a) unemployment; (b) long-term sick; (c) early retirement. These were regressed against a variable for arthritis and confounding factors (age, socioeconomic job classification, employing sector, year and additional health conditions). Additional analyses examined an interaction between the variable arthritis and these factors to test whether the effect of arthritis differs between these groups.

Results: Employees reporting having arthritis were more likely to have sickness absence (1.35 percentage points greater rate (95% CI (0.92, 1.78)) and to transition to long-term sick (0.79 percentage points (0.46, 1.13)) and early retirement (0.58 percentage points (0.05, 1.11)). No effect was found for transitions to unemployment. There was limited evidence that the effects of arthritis vary for employees in different socioeconomic classifications.

Conclusions: Employees living with arthritis have higher rates of sickness absence and greater rates of transitions from employment to long-term sick and early retirement. Further work could look at ways to quantify the implications for individuals, employers and the state and ways to alleviate the effects of living with arthritis on work participation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11624701PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/rmdopen-2024-004817DOI Listing

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