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- Title
Healthy workers or less healthy leavers? Mortality in military veterans.
- Authors
Bergman, B P; Macdonald, E B; Mackay, D F; Pell, J P
- Abstract
Background The 'healthy worker effect' predicts that longer employment is positively associated with reduced mortality, but few studies have examined mortality in military veterans irrespective of exposure to conflict. Aims To examine mortality in a large national cohort of Scottish veterans by length of service. Methods Retrospective cohort study comparing survival in up to 30-year follow-up among 57 000 veterans and 173 000 people with no record of service, matched for age, sex and area of residence, who were born between 1945 and 1985. We compared antecedent diagnoses in the two groups to provide information on probable risk factors. Results By the end of follow-up, 3520 (6%) veterans had died, compared with 10 947 (6%) non-veterans. Cox proportional hazard analysis confirmed no significant difference overall unadjusted or after adjusting for deprivation. On subgroup analysis, those who left prematurely (early service leavers) were at significantly increased risk of death (hazard ratio (HR) 1.16, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.09–1.24, P < 0.001), although the increase became non-significant after adjusting for socioeconomic status (HR 1.05, 95% CI 0.99–1.12). Longer-serving veterans were at significantly lower risk of death than non-veterans; the risk decreased both with length of service and in more recent birth cohorts. Smoking-related disease was the greatest contributor to increased mortality in early leavers. Conclusions Among longer-serving veterans, there was evidence of a HWE partly attributable to selective attrition of early service leavers, but birth cohort analysis suggests improvements over time which may also reflect a causal effect of improved in-service health promotion.
- Subjects
VETERANS; EMPLOYMENT tenure; MORTALITY; HEALTH promotion; COHORT analysis
- Publication
Occupational Medicine, 2019, Vol 69, Issue 8/9, p570
- ISSN
0962-7480
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/occmed/kqz023