4.7 Article

The role of physical and cognitive/emotional functioning in the associations between common health conditions and working

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 322, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115816

Keywords

Health; Cognitive ability and skills; Workability; Functioning; Cardiovascular disease; Employment

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This study aimed to assess the relationship between health conditions and employment, as well as the degree to which physical and cognitive/emotional functioning explained this relationship. The study found that mental health conditions, nervous system/sensory conditions, and cardiovascular conditions were negatively associated with employment, while functional abilities were positively associated with employment to different degrees depending on education. This suggests that providing appropriate accommodations for functional limitations may promote employment for certain diseases, while broader accommodations may be necessary for reducing work exits due to cardiovascular conditions.
The degree to which functional abilities explain the negative associations between chronic disease and employment is not well understood. If functional limitations play an important role, then increasing access to accommodations and rehabilitation could facilitate employment among people with chronic illness. If not, other barriers related to living with chronic illness may be at play, calling for other interventions. The goal of this study was to 1) assess how health conditions were associated with employment for adults ages 30-69, and 2) test how much of these illness-employment associations was explained by physical and cognitive/emotional functioning. We fielded the state-of-the-art Work Disability Functional Assessment Battery (WD-FAB) in the nationally-representative RAND American Life Panel (N = 1774) in 2020, stratifying the sample by age and educational attainment. We found that mental health conditions, nervous system/sensory conditions, and cardiovascular conditions were significantly associated with large reductions in the probability of working, at-8,-10, and-19 percentage points (pp) respectively, while there were no significant associations for other conditions. Functional abilities were positively associated with employment to different degrees depending on education. Among those without college degrees, physical functioning (+16 pp) but not cognitive/emotional functioning was signifi-cantly associated with working. Among those with college degrees, both physical (+6 pp) and cognitive/ emotional (+4 pp) functioning were associated with working. Older workers (ages 51-69) showed a larger as-sociation between physical functioning and work with no association between cognitive/emotional functioning and work. Importantly, accounting for functioning reduced the negative associations with employment for mental health and nervous system/sensory conditions but not for cardiovascular conditions. This implies that, for the former conditions, accommodating functional limitations could promote greater employment. However, broader accommodations, such as paid sick leave, increased control over work schedules, and other improve-ments to working conditions may be necessary to reduce work exits due to cardiovascular conditions.

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