Online Program

280165
Work disability: A central measure of public health, a health disparity affecting African Americans


Monday, November 4, 2013

James N. Laditka, DA, PhD, MPA, Department of Public Health Sciences, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC
Sarah Laditka, PhD, Department of Public Health Sciences, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC
Being able to work is important for economic security and health. When retired or not employed, being able to do work that is needed in the home or community is similarly important. We studied work disability among 7,055 Americans ages 20 108, followed up to 41 years. We used the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (1968-2009), which in 37 waves asked adults at all ages if “a physical or nervous condition” prohibited work. We estimated monthly probabilities of transitions to and from disability, and to death, with multinomial logistic Markov models, adjusting for age, gender, income, education, wealth, childhood circumstances, and other confounders. Random effects adjusted for multiple observations for individuals. The disability probabilities were used to conduct microsimulations, creating large populations (1 million), providing a monthly record of work disability from age 20 to death for each individual. Bootstrapping addressed survey design. African Americans were more likely to become work disabled than non-Hispanic Whites (odds ratio 1.64) and to die non-disabled (1.49) or disabled (1.26), and less likely to recover from disability (0.83), all p<0.0001. Active life expectancy results underscored the disparity: Given survival to age 20, average total years lived and disabled were 83.0/23.7 for African American women, 87.4/18.4 for White women, 75.0/17.1 for African American men, 80.7/13.5 for White men. Thus, disabled life as a proportion of total life comparing African Americans to Whites was 37.7% greater for women, 39.7% for men. Findings highlight the life-course health impacts of a disparity affecting African Americans in work disability.

Learning Areas:

Epidemiology
Public health or related research
Social and behavioral sciences

Learning Objectives:
Assess public health life-course impacts of work disability in a nationally representative sample from the United States. Evaluate total life expectancy and disabled life expectancy with regard to work disability. Analyze the magnitude, health consequences, and economic impacts of the health disparity affecting African Americans in work disability.

Keyword(s): Disability, African American

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I have been the principal investigator on several federally funded grants focusing on active life expectancy, physical and cognitive disability, and health disparities. My research emphasizes life course methods and longitudinal data analysis, and the development of new applications of active life expectancy research methods to better understand causes of disability, poor health, and health disparities.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.