The influence of psychosocial working conditions on late-life physical functioning
2018 (Engelska)Ingår i: Revue d'épidémiologie et de santé publique, ISSN 0398-7620, E-ISSN 1773-0627, Vol. 66, nr Suppl. 5, s. S279-S279Artikel i tidskrift, Meeting abstract (Refereegranskat) Published
Hållbar utveckling
Hållbar utveckling
Abstract [en]
Background
In older adults, increasing age correlates with declining physical functioning. The growing demographic challenge posed by an aging population makes finding predictors of physical functioning in old age increasingly important. Work dominates much of our adult lives, which makes it likely that the workplace is important to health and aging. Stressful working conditions have been associated with limitations in physical functioning in old age. Active jobs (high psychological demands, high control) are considered to increase learning, which may reduce the perception of situations as stressful and instead be viewed as challenges and opportunities for personal growth. This will, in turn, lead to feelings of self-efficacy that may encourage an active leisure-time, such as physical activity. We investigated the long-term association between active jobs and mobility in old age.
Method
Two individually linked Swedish surveys were used (n=775). A psychosocial job-exposure matrix was used to measure active jobs four times in midlife (age 40–65). Mobility was measured in 2014 as the self-reported ability to stand without support, walk up and down stairs, walk 100 meters fairly briskly, rise from a chair with arms crossed across the chest, and ability to balance indoors, summarized in a 5-item index (0–5). Data were analyzed with ordered logistic regressions.
Results
Having an active job was associated with significantly better mobility in old age compared to people in non-active jobs. However, the accumulated score of active jobs over working life were not more strongly associated with mobility in old age than the score of active job in 1991, which may indicate that the conditions of a person's most recent job mattered the most.
Conclusions
Active job conditions in midlife are important predictors of mobility in old age. Promoting active job conditions may be used to improve midlife interventions aimed at preventing physical deterioration later in life.
Ort, förlag, år, upplaga, sidor
Elsevier, 2018. Vol. 66, nr Suppl. 5, s. S279-S279
Nationell ämneskategori
Gerontologi, medicinsk/hälsovetenskaplig inriktning
Identifikatorer
URN: urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-42748DOI: 10.1016/j.respe.2018.05.111OAI: oai:DiVA.org:hj-42748DiVA, id: diva2:1282171
Konferens
European Congress of Epidemiology “Crises, epidemiological transitions and the role of epidemiologists”, July 4-6, 2018, Lyon, France
2019-01-242019-01-242021-04-21Bibliografiskt granskad