Literature DB >> 15255489

Health care utilisation before and after retirement due to illness. A 13-year population-based follow-up study of prematurely retired men and referents from the general population.

Thorne Wallman1, Gunilla Burel, Sven Kullman, Kurt Svärdsudd.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that prematurely retired men have long-term unspecifically increased health care utilisation, indicating broader health deterioration than reflected by the retirement diagnosis.
DESIGN: A two-cohort study.
SETTING: The City of Eskilstuna, Sweden.
SUBJECTS: 215 men aged 30-54 years who retired early due to illness and a random sample of 620 referents of the same age from the general population. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Health care utilisation from 5 years before retirement until 13 years after retirement.
RESULTS: The retired men had 7.2 times higher utilisation of primary health care during the baseline year and 2-3 times higher rates of hospital admissions than the referents during the 13-year follow-up. The panorama of main hospital discharge diagnoses was the same among retired men and referents irrespective of the retirement diagnoses of the former. Over time, health care utilisation among the retired men decreased, but was constant among the referents. After 13 years, the retired men still had twice the rate of the referents.
CONCLUSION: Prematurely retired men had high health care utilisation also after retirement. They appear to have broader health deterioration than reflected by the retirement diagnosis.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15255489     DOI: 10.1080/02813430410005126

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Prim Health Care        ISSN: 0281-3432            Impact factor:   2.581


  10 in total

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2.  Use of Health Services and Rehabilitation before and after the Beginning of Long-Term Sickness Absence-Comparing the Use by Employment and Disability Pension Transition after the Sickness Absence in Finland.

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Authors:  Thorne Wallman; Hans Wedel; Saga Johansson; Annika Rosengren; Henry Eriksson; Lennart Welin; Kurt Svärdsudd
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Review 5.  Men's help-seeking and engagement with general practice: An integrative review.

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6.  Sick-leave track record and other potential predictors of a disability pension. A population based study of 8,218 men and women followed for 16 years.

Authors:  Thorne Wallman; Hans Wedel; Edward Palmer; Annika Rosengren; Saga Johansson; Henry Eriksson; Kurt Svärdsudd
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7.  The role country of birth plays in receiving disability pensions in relation to patterns of health care utilisation and socioeconomic differences: a multilevel analysis of Malmo, Sweden.

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8.  Cardiovascular risk factors among retired attendees visiting primary care clinics.

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9.  Risk markers of all-cause and diagnosis-specific disability pension--a prospective cohort study of individuals sickness absent due to stress-related mental disorders.

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10.  Midlife work ability and mobility limitation in old age among non-disability and disability retirees--a prospective study.

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  10 in total

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