1. Sickness absence and early retirement at two workplaces—effects of organisational intervention in Sweden
- Author
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Berndt Karlsson, Anders Knutsson, Staffan Marklund, and Hans Goine
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Paper ,Gerontology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Alcohol Drinking ,Occupational Health Services ,Extraction and Processing Industry ,Personnel Management ,Cohort Studies ,Occupational medicine ,Pensions ,Sex Factors ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Financial Support ,Humans ,Medicine ,Cumulative incidence ,Workplace ,Sweden ,Retirement ,Pension ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Rehabilitation, Vocational ,Disability pension ,Logistic Models ,Cohort ,Sick leave ,Female ,Sick Leave ,business ,Cohort study ,Demography - Abstract
This study sought to compare sickness absence and early retirement at two workplaces in Sweden before and after they had received financial support from the Working Life Fund and implemented vocational rehabilitation activities. Two paper and pulp manufacturing plants were compared and a cohort study was set up. The cohort included everyone born in 1934 or later who was employed in December 1988 (918 employees at Plant A and 1543 at Plant B). For 10 years (1989–98), sick leave and disability pensions were monitored. The periods before and after the intervention (1989–93 and 1994–98, respectively) were compared. Cumulative incidence was calculated for short-, long-term and very long-term sick leave, company pension and early retirement. There was no difference between the plants in terms of the three different outcomes when sick leave was measured before and after the intervention. Sick leave in Period 1 was strongly correlated with an elevated risk of sick leave in Period 2. The cumulative incidence of short-term sick leave decreased from 0.92 (95% CI, 0.91–0.93) in Period 1 to 0.79 (95% CI, 0.77–0.80) in Period 2. For employees in the upper age groups, relative risk for long-term and very long-term sick leave was elevated in both periods. The incidence of early retirement and company pension differed between the companies. We conclude that the size of financial investments in rehabilitation programmes has no significant impact on sickness absence or disability pension, based on a comparison between two paper and pulp manufacturing plants in Sweden during the early 1990s.
- Published
- 2004