| Literature DB >> 30178434 |
Emelien A Kadijk1, Swenneke van den Heuvel2, Jan Fekke Ybema3, Fenna R M Leijten4.
Abstract
Purpose With an ageing workforce, employees are increasingly confronted with multi-morbidity. Especially physical and mental health problems often occur together. This study aims to (i) explore the effect of multi-morbidity on work ability of ageing employees, more specifically the effects of the number of health problems and the combination of physical and mental health problems, and to (ii) explore to what extent the effects of physical and mental health problems on work ability are explained by applying differing coping styles. Methods A 1 year follow up study (2012-2013) was conducted among 7175 employees aged 45-64 years. Linear regression analyses were conducted to examine longitudinal relationships between multi-morbidity, coping styles and work ability. To determine whether coping styles mediate the effects of multi-morbidity on work ability, Sobel tests were conducted. Results A higher number of health problems was related to poorer work ability, but this negative effect stabilized from three health problems onwards. The combination of physical and mental health problem(s) was more strongly related to poorer work ability than only physical health problems. The negative relation between physical health problems and work ability was partly suppressed by active coping, while the negative relation between the combination of physical and mental health problem(s) on work ability was partly explained by avoidant coping. Conclusions Ageing employees with multi-morbidity have a reduced work ability, especially when mental health problems are present. The greater negative effects of the combination of physical and mental health problems on work ability are partially due to unfavorable coping styles.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30178434 PMCID: PMC6675751 DOI: 10.1007/s10926-018-9811-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Rehabil ISSN: 1053-0487
Fig. 1Schematic overview of research questions and analyses
Characteristics of the study population at wave 1 (2013)
| n (%) | |
|---|---|
| Covariates | |
| Gender | |
| Males | 4061 (56.6%) |
| Females | 3114 (43.4%) |
| Age (2010) | |
| 45–50 | 1956 (27.3%) |
| 50–54 | 2094 (29.2%) |
| 55–59 | 2172 (30.3%) |
| 60–64 | 953 (13.3%) |
| Education | |
| Low | 1820 (25.4%) |
| Medium | 2779 (38.7%) |
| High | 2576 (35.9%) |
| Work status | |
| Employee | 6542 (91.2%) |
| Self-employed | 633 (8.2%) |
| Work ability (range 0–10) | |
| (Wave 1, 2012) | 7.93 (1.49) |
| (Wave 2, 2013) | 7.89 (1.49) |
| Multi-morbidity | |
| Number of health problems | |
| 0 Health problems | 3108 (43.3%) |
| 1 Health problem | 2250 (31.4%) |
| 2 Health problems | 1230 (17.1%) |
| 3 Health problems | 416 (5.8%) |
| 4 Health problems | 129 (1.8%) |
| 5 Health problems | 42 (0.6%) |
| Only physical or only mental | |
| Only physical health problem(s) | 3822 (53.3%) |
| One or more mental health problem(s) | 58 (0.8%) |
| Multiple physical and/or mental health problems | |
| Two physical health problems | 1139 (15.9%) |
| One physical and one or more mental health problem(s) | 91 (1.3%) |
| Mental and physical health problem(s) | |
| One or more mental health problem(s)a | 245 (3.4%) |
| One physical health problema (at least) | 2283 (31.8%) |
| Coping styles (range 1–4) | |
| Active | 2.91 (0.55) |
| Avoidant | 1.73 (0.49) |
| Social support seeking | 2.18 (0.55) |
% percentage of the whole sample; SD standard deviation; N = 7175
aUsed in creating the interaction term
Association between multi-morbidity and work ability
| B | SE | Adj. R2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1: | 20.30% | ||
| 1 Health problem | − 0.18** | 0.04 | |
| 2 Health problems | − 0.42** | 0.05 | |
| 3 Health problems | − 0.62** | 0.07 | |
| 4 Health problems | − 0.66** | 0.12 | |
| 5 Or more health problems | − 0.63** | 0.21 | |
| Model 2: | 19.40% | ||
| Only physical health problem(s) | − 0.24** | 0.03 | |
| Only mental health problem(s) | − 0.52** | 0.19 | |
| Model 3: | 19.30% | ||
| 2 Physical health problems | − 0.24** | 0.04 | |
| 1 Physical and 1 or more mental health problem(s) | − 0.71** | 0.14 | |
| Model 4a: | 18.60% | ||
| 1 Physical health problem | − 0.17** | 0.03 | |
| 1 Or more mental health problem(s) | − 0.68** | 0.11 | |
| Model 4b: | 18.50% | ||
| 1 Physical health problem—centered | − 0.17** | 0.03 | |
| 1 Or more mental health problem(s)—centered | − 0.65** | 0.10 | |
|
| − 0.11 | 0.21 |
Reference category in all models is ‘no health problems’; dependent variable is work ability at wave 2; covariates included in each model: gender, age, educational level, work status, and work ability at wave 1
B unstandardized regression coefficient; SE standard error; Adj. R adjusted R2 (explained variance)
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; N = 7175
Fig. 2Figure of the interaction effect between one physical and mental health problem(s)
Mediation effects of coping style on the multi-morbidity–work ability association
| Independent variable | Α | Β | τ′ (direct) | αβ (indirect) | αβ/(αβ + T′) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dependent variable | Coping | WA | WA | Sobel-test | |
| Model 1: active coping | |||||
| 2 Physical health problems | 0.06 (0.02)** | – | − 0.25 (0.04)** | 0.01** | − 0.04 (4%) |
| 1 Physical and 1or more mental health problem(s) | − 0.19 (0.06)** | – | − 0.69 (0.14)** | –0.03** | 0.04 (4%) |
|
| – | 0.14 (0.03)** | – | – | – |
| Model 2: avoidant coping | |||||
| 2 Physical health problems | 0.01 (0.02) | – | − 0.24 (0.04)** | − 0.002 | 0.001 (0.1%) |
| 1 Physical and 1 or more mental health problem(s) | 0.34 (0.05)** | – | − 0.67 (0.14)** | − 0.05** | 0.07 (7%) |
|
| – | − 0.17 (0.03)** | – | – | – |
| Model 3: social support seeking | |||||
| 2 Physical health problems | 0.04 (0.02)* | – | − 0.24 (0.04)** | 0.002 | − 0.008 (0.8%) |
| 1 Physical and 1 or more mental health problem(s) | − 0.08 (0.06) | – | − 0.71 (0.14)** | − 0.004 | 0.006 (0.6%) |
| – | 0.05 (0.03) | – | – | – | |
Reference category in all models is ‘no health problems’; covariates gender, age, educational level and work status and work ability at wave 1 included in all models
α unstandardized regression coefficient (with standard error in brackets) for the association between the independent variable and the active, avoidant and support seeking coping styles, B unstandardized regression coefficient (standard error) of the association between the active, avoidant and support seeking coping styles and work ability at wave 2, τ′ the direct effect = unstandardized regression coefficient (standard error) t of the association between the independent variable and work ability at wave 2 adjusted for coping styles, αβ the indirect effect (A * B), αβ/(αβ + τ′) the extent of mediation, WA work ability
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; N = 7175