| Literature DB >> 31924217 |
Chloé Charlotte Schröder1, Maria Dyck2,3, Jürgen Breckenkamp2, Hans Martin Hasselhorn4, Jean-Baptist du Prel4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An ageing and a shrinking labour force implies that the prevention of a premature exit from work due to poor health will become more relevant in the future. Medical rehabilitation is a health service that aims at active participation in working life. The provision of this service will be relevant for an increasing part of the ageing labour force, namely, employees with a migrant background and their different subgroups. Thus, this study examines whether first- and second-generation employees with migrant background differ from non-migrants in their utilisation of rehabilitation services and whether within the subsample of migrant employees, those persons with foreign nationality differ from those with German nationality.Entities:
Keywords: cohort study; employee participation; migrants; rehabilitation; retirement; utilisation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31924217 PMCID: PMC6954536 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4845-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Characteristics of the study sample of socially insured employees, as specified by migrant background (n=6303)
| Non-EMB ( | G1 EMB ( | G2 EMB ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Utilisation of rehabilitation services [n (%)], m=3 | ||||
| None | 4485 (87.1) | 617 (88.3) | 390 (86.5) | 0.612b |
| Yes | 665 (12.9) | 82 (11.7) | 61 (13.5) | |
| Inpatient | 440 (8.5) | 66 (9.4) | 43 (9.5) | 0.109c |
| Outpatient | 225 (4.4) | 16 (2.3) | 19 (4.0) | |
| Year of birth 1959 [n (%)] | 2291 (44.5) | 292 (41.8) | 188 (41.7) | 0.244 |
| Female sex [n (%)] | 2743 (53.2) | 345 (49.4) | 255 (56.5) | |
| Occupational class [n (%)], m=63 | ||||
| Highly qualified | 1001 (19.6) | 77 (11.2) | 89 (19.9) | |
| Qualified | 2238 (43.9) | 189 (27.4) | 194 (43.3) | |
| Un-/semi-skilled | 1863 (36.5) | 424 (61.4) | 165 (36.8) | |
| Low quality of leadership [n (%)], m=472 | 1479 (31.0) | 194 (30.4) | 139 (33.3) | 0.558 |
| High work-privacy conflict [n (%)], m=63 | 1182 (23.1) | 155 (22.6) | 103 (23.1) | 0.944 |
| Low influence at work [n (%)], m=1058 | 2430 (55.7) | 313 (62.4) | 202 (53.0) | |
| Work stress, ERI [Mdn (IQR)], m=1238 | 0.45 (0.25) | 0.44 (0.24) | 0.46 (0.24) | 0.758d |
| Exposed to physical environmental factors [n (%)], m=3 | 1417 (27.5) | 272 (39.0) | 137 (30.4) | |
| Exposed to physical burdensome factors [n (%)], m=3 | 1613 (31.3) | 263 (37.7) | 139 (30.8) | |
| Poor self-rated health [n (%)] | 2292 (44.5) | 350 (50.1) | 213 (47.2) | |
| Home language mostly German [n (%)] | 5147 (99.9) | 445 (63.6) | 448 (99.4) | |
m number of missing values due to respondents not responding to the item, Mdn median, IQR interquartile range; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001
atested with Chi2-test if not otherwise specified
btesting dichotomous variable of utilisation of rehabilitation (yes/no)
ctesting trichotomous variable of utilisation of rehabilitation (no/inpatient/outpatient)
dtested with Kruskal-Wallis test
Association between utilisation of rehabilitation services (general/ outpatient/ inpatient) and migrant background in 2011
| Model 0 | Model 1a | Model 2b | Model 3c | Reductiond (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General rehabilitation services ( | |||||
| OR (95%-CI) | |||||
| Non-EMB | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| G1 EMB | 0.90 (0.72-1.11) | 0.86 (0.67-1.10) | 0.86 (0.67-1.10) | 0.91 (0.68-1.23) | -1.11 |
| G2 EMB | 1.06 (0.91-1.22) | 1.06 (0.92-1.23) | 1.07 (0.80-1.41) | 1.05 (0.79-1.39) | 0.94 |
| AME | |||||
| Non-EMB | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| G1 EMB | -0.0122 | -0.0168 | -0.0169 | -0.0104 | 14.75 |
| G2 EMB | 0.0060 | 0.0068 | 0.0072 | 0.0047 | 21.67 |
| R2 | 0.000 | 0.006 | 0.017 | 0.057 | |
| Inpatient rehabilitation services ( | |||||
| OR (95%-CI) | |||||
| Non-EMB | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| G1 EMB | 1.09 (0.82-1.45) | 1.04 (0.79-1.37) | 1.04 (0.78-1.37) | 1.16 (0.84-1.60) | -6.42 |
| G2 EMB | 1.12 (0.95-1.33) | 1.14 (0.84-1.53) | 1.14 (0.82-1.58) | 1.10 (0.79-1.54) | 1.79 |
| AME | |||||
| Non-EMB | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| G1 EMB | 0.0071 | 0.0027 | 0.0031 | 0.0118 | -66.20 |
| G2 EMB | 0.0096 | 0.0104 | 0.0104 | 0.0075 | 21.88 |
| R2 | 0.000 | 0.012 | 0.028 | 0.078 | |
| Outpatient rehabilitation services ( | |||||
| OR (95%-CI) | |||||
| Non-EMB | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| G1 EMB | 19.23 | ||||
| G2 EMB | 0.92 (0.59-1.44) | 0.92 (0.56-1.53) | 0.93 (0.57-1.53) | 0.91 (0.56-1.50 | 1.09 |
| AME | |||||
| Non-EMB | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| G1 EMB | -0.0238 | -0.0292 | -0.0302 | -0.0382 | -60.50 |
| G2 EMB | -0.0035 | -0.0033 | -0.0028 | -0.0037 | -5.71 |
| R2 | 0.004 | 0.006 | 0.012 | 0.023 | |
OR Odds Ratio, CI confidence interval, Ref. reference, AME Average marginal effect, R Nagelkerke pseudo-R2; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01
aadjusted for year of birth, sex, and occupational class
bfurther adjusted for the quality of leadership, influence at work, work-privacy conflict, work stress (ERI), and phys. environmental and burdensome factors
cfurther adjusted for self-rated health and language at home
dreduction of effect size between model 0 and 3
Characteristics of employees with migrant background, specified by nationality, n=1148
| German EMB ( | Foreign EMB ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Utilisation of out- or inpatient rehabilitation [n (%)] | 115 (12.7) | 28 (11.4) | 0.565 |
| Year of birth 1959 [n (%)] | 400 (44.3) | 79 (32.1) | |
| Female sex [n (%)] | 488 (54.1) | 111 (45.1) | |
| Occupational class [n (%)], m=12 | |||
| Highly qualified | 140 (15.7) | 26 (10.7) | |
| Qualified | 321 (36.0) | 62 (25.4) | |
| Un-/semi-skilled | 431 (48.3) | 156 (63.9) | |
| Low quality of leadership [n (%)], m=94 | 266 (31.9) | 65 (29.7) | 0.537 |
| High work-privacy conflict [n (%)], m=17 | 206 (23.2) | 52 (21.4) | 0.554 |
| Low influence at work [n (%)], m=266 | 405 (57.6) | 109 (60.9) | 0.426 |
| Work stress, ERI [Mdn (IQR)], m=301 | 0.45 (0.25) | 0.43 (0.23) | 0.260b |
| Exposed to physical environmental factors [n (%)], m=1 | 327 (36.3) | 81 (33.1) | 0.355 |
| Exposed to physical burdensome factors [n (%)], m=1 | 308 (34.1) | 92 (37.6) | 0.321 |
| Poor self-rated health [n (%)] | 449 (49.8) | 112 (45.5) | 0.237 |
| Home language mostly German [n (%)] | 764 (84.7) | 129 (52.4) | |
m number of missing values due to respondents not responding to the item, Mdn median, IQR interquartile range; * p < 0.05, *** p < 0.001
atested with Chi2-test if not otherwise specified
btested with Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney-test
Association between utilisation of general rehabilitation services and nationality in employees with migrant background
| Model 0 | Model 1a | Model 2b | Model 3c | Reductiond (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rehabilitation services in general ( | |||||
| OR (95%-CI) | |||||
| German EMB | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Foreign EMB | 0.88 (0.57-1.36) | 0.87 (0.57-1.35) | 0.86 (0.55-1.35) | 0.91 (0.57-1.46) | -3.41 |
| AME | |||||
| German EMB | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Foreign EMB | -0.0141 | -0.0147 | -0.0166 | -0.0105 | 25.53 |
| R2 | 0.001 | 0.005 | 0.018 | 0.026 | |
OR Odds Ratio, CI confidence interval, Ref. reference, AME Average marginal effect, R Nagelkerke pseudo-R2
a adjusted for year of birth, sex, and occupational class
b further adjusted for the quality of leadership, influence at work, work-privacy conflict, work stress (ERI), and phys. environmental and burdensome factors
c further adjusted for self-rated health and language at home
d reduction of effect size between model 0 and 3