‘If You Don’t Work, You…’

Losing life and livelihood: a systematic review and meta-analysis of unemployment and all-cause mortality

Authors:
ROELFS David J., et al
Journal article citation:
Social Science and Medicine, 72(6), March 2011, pp.840-854.
Publisher:
Elsevier

Meta-analyses of data from 42 studies from developed nations revealed that unemployment is associated with a significant increase in overall mortality, especially in males and those at the beginning, or middle stage, of their careers. Future studies should continue to investigate mediating, moderate and confounding factors, especially in terms of those that may be modifiable risk factors.

Extended abstract:
AuthorROELFS David J

Losing life and livelihood: a systematic review and meta-analysis of unemployment and all-cause mortality.

Journal citation/publication details

Social Science and Medicine, 72(6), March 2011, pp.840-854.

Summary

Meta-analyses of data from 42 studies from developed nations revealed that unemployment is associated with a significant increase in overall mortality, especially in males and those at the beginning, or middle stage, of their careers. Future studies should continue to investigate mediating, moderate and confounding factors, especially in terms of those that may be modifiable risk factors.

Context

The number of unemployed people worldwide has risen steadily over the last decade, prompting an increase in research on the health effects of unemployment. Most studies have found that unemployment is associated with decreased longevity, but there is no consensus on the degree to which longevity is reduced in population sub-groups, or on the most important mediating, moderating, and confounding factors involved. The aim of this study was to focus on these factors by: evaluating the impact of pre-existing health status and health behaviours on all-cause mortality; comparing the potential moderating effect in countries with and without national health care systems, and; assessing the potential moderating roles of gender, age, time, duration of follow-up, and case-control group composition on the association between unemployment and mortality.

Methods

What sources were searched?
The electronic databases Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL, and Web of Science were searched in June 2005 and again in July 2008 and January 2009. Hand searches were carried out on the bibliographies of eligible publications and related articles.

What search terms/strategies were used?
Searches were performed using terms for psychological stress, stress disorders, mortality, unemployment, and a wide range of social factors. Full details of the search algorithm for Medline are presented in an appendix and details of the other search strategies are available from the authors on request. The searches were performed by a research librarian.

What criteria were used to decide on which studies to include?
Studies were included if all-cause mortality was the outcome variable, unemployment was measured at the individual level, and the results were compared between a study population that experienced unemployment and  one that did not experience unemployment at all or experienced it to a lesser extent. Searches were carried out in English but publications found to be published in other languages were included if relevant.

Who decided on their relevance and quality?
Two named authors were responsible for study selection and coding, and a third author was consulted as necessary. Study quality was assessed, using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale for non-randomised trials, by the same two authors working independently; the average rating for each study was used in the analysis. The study selection process is outlined in Figure 1 and includes the number of studies included at each stage.

How many studies were included and where were they from?
A total of 1,570 publications was identified from the database searches; 48 articles met the study inclusion criteria and 30 were included in the review. In all, 232 articles identified from hand search were also included. The pool of 262 publications reported on a range of psychosocial stressors; the current review used a subset of 42 articles that focused on the association between unemployment and all-cause mortality. There were eight studies from the USA, seven each from the UK and Sweden, six from Finland, two each from Denmark, Israel and Japan, and single studies from eight other countries.

How were the study findings combined?
Mortality risk estimates were extracted from the 42 included studies. Odds ratios and relative risks were converted to hazard ratios. Meta-analyses and meta-regression analyses were conducted using a random effects model. Further details of statistical methods are included in the study text and appendices.

Findings of the review

In all, 235 mortality risk estimates from 42 studies, and representing more than 20 million people, were analysed. The majority were from men, and almost all were individuals of working-age at baseline.

Unemployed persons were significantly more likely to die than those in a comparator group; the hazard ratio adjusted for age and other covariates was 1.63, showing that unemployment is associated with a 63% higher risk of mortality. The average effect was higher for men than women with an increased risk of 78% compared to 37%, respectively. Unemployed people in their early or mid careers faced an increased risk of 73% and 77%, compared to 25% for those in their late careers. The risk of death was over 70% in the first ten years of follow-up but fell to 42% after that, although the trend was not significant in the final meta-regression model.

Studies that controlled for any measure of health showed no significant difference in the magnitude of risk compared to remaining studies but the hazard ratio was reduced by 24% for studies that controlled for one or more health behaviours, compared to the other studies. This suggests that health behaviour may confound the association between unemployment and mortality and also that pre-existing health behaviour and health conditions do not account for all of the relationship.

No significant difference in mortality was found between unemployed people in the USA, which has no universal health coverage, and the Scandinavian nations combined, where public health care coverage is most comprehensive, or the remaining nations. This suggests that national-level differences in policy may not affect the rate of mortality after unemployment in developed countries.

Authors’ conclusions

‘Unemployment was associated with a substantially increased risk of death among broad segments of the population. Future research should continue to focus on possible mediating, moderating, and confounding factors and on whether this risk is modifiable, either at the health system level or the individual level.’

Implications for policy or practice

None are discussed.

Subject terms:
mortality, risk, unemployment;
Content type:
systematic review
Link:
Journal home page
ISSN print:
0277-9536

Search again for:

Authors:
ROELFS David J.et al
Publisher:
Elsevier
Subject terms:
mortalityriskunemployment

From Social Care Online, here.

The Extreme Naiveté of Antizionist Apostles to the Goyim

There are Jews who see great importance in informing non-Jews the State of Israel is not fervently religiously observant. In fact, they say, Judaism in the ostensible State of the Jews is more of a deceptive veneer than anything else.

I’m thinking especially of “True Torah Jews”*, whose website header screams: “Our mission is to inform the world that the State of Israel does NOT represent Jews or Judaism.”

Thank you, Captain Obvious!

Without even a minimal effort at investigation, anyone should assume this is the case. We all know and observe the official Cursedian identity of scores of states, in name only (by ANY standard). No need to study much history (or any at all, if you reside in one).

So what if the Israeli flag has a Star of David?! How many scores of countries have meaningless Shti Va’erev in their flags, merely a tachshit (you need not destroy the symbol on your Swiss Army Knife or luggage, strictly speaking)?

If anything, the claim signifies honest internal debate about the very facts, so their efforts are COUNTER-productive…


UPDATE: The site address has been changed to “Torah Jews” (omitting the truth, of course), but the message is the same.

Redirection screenshot:

The header now states:

מוסד נטרונא, Anti-Zionist organization, Gatekeepers of the Satmar Rebbe’s Legacy.

And here is their “highlighted” post on the Homepage:

אימת מלכות – כפרת עוונות

ספר “רוממות אל” על תהלים לרב משה אלשיך ז”ל פרק ב’:

אם תהיה לכם יראת מלכות המושלת עליכם אל ירפו ידיכם אלא אדרבא עבדו את ד’ באותה יראה כי היא תהיה לכם עבודה את ד’ שתקבלוה לכפרת עון וגילו אם תהיה לכם מהם רעדה כי תגדלו הכפרה יותר. וזולת הכפרה גם תהיה לכם נשק להלחם בם והוא הטוהר לב כי זכות האמנה תהיה לכם לנשק ברזל נגדם.

(מצאתי ע”י ספר תשועת עולמים)

‘Jews, Trade Your Green Toilet Paper for a Plane Ticket While You Still Can!’

From Investor’s Business Daily

Dow Jones Today Edges Up On Jobless Claims

Jobless Claims Soar, But Decline from Prior Week

Jobless claims came in at 4.427 million during the week ended April 18, down from 5.237 million claims in the prior week and almost exactly in line with economist expectations. The decline and the matching of estimates were both positives, but nevertheless brought the total number of first-time unemployment claims filed over the past five weeks to 26 million.

In other words, it’s good news that only 4,427,000 people filed for unemployment this week, because that’s fewer newly unemployed people than the number who lost their jobs last week. Of course, the people who previously lost their jobs still don’t have jobs, but this is great news, and the stock market should celebrate.

One day there will be one person left with a job and he will lose it. The stock market will go up because the previous week there were two new claims, and next week there won’t be any.

One day two homeless, starving, former middle-class people will be sitting on the street together. One will complain about the situation, and the other will tell him to cheer up, the economy must be good because the stock market went up.

The stock market is a total farce and a propaganda tool to manipulate the public.

It’s a good thing they’re printing trillions and trillions of green sheets of toilet paper, so there won’t be a shortage.

Jews, trade in your green toilet paper for a plane ticket while you still can.  A caravan in the Negev will soon be a lot more comfortable than a mansion in Jewtown, USA.

Chananya

Ethos, Logos and Pathos – Popular on Hyehudi

  1. Shlomo Carlebach: A Gifted Musician But Also a Child Molester
  2. תיקוני תשובת המשקל לפגם הברית ועוד – חלק שני
  3. מחר: חוברת חדשה מבית ארגון ‘ונשמרתם’ – לתיקון פגם הברית
  4. Offer Korban Pesach? But the International Uproar Will Be Deafening!
  5. Carefully Read Rambam Hilchos Deos (End of Chapter Four)
  6. סיפור עסיסי נגד רב-מטעם שלמה גורן
  7. Writing Successful Jewish Fiction Is Easy – Pick Up the Manual FREE
  8. Abandoning the Priestly Blessing in the Diaspora – Why Do You Look So GUILTY?!
  9. Quick Tip: Hold on to SOME Kedushas Tzion Issues! (Start with the Upcoming One)
  10. הבה נעתיר לקיצו של המשטר הקומוניסטי בסין! – מודעת רחוב
  11. Why Is Mesirah Permitted Against Corona-Era Minyanim, but Not CHILD ABUSERS?!
  12. Why Politicians Must Engender Fear
  13. VIRAL POEM: Go Into Your Room and Take a Good, Hard Look at Yourself
  14. When Protests Are Not Bittul Torah
  15. Dear Diaspora Rabbi: Kindly Sign Your Own Name at the Bottom and Hand This Out

Enjoy, and pass it on!