Earnings among people with multiple sclerosis in Sweden, by education and occupationShow others and affiliations
2019 (English)In: European Journal of Public Health, ISSN 1101-1262, E-ISSN 1464-360X, Vol. 29, no Supplement 4, p. 68-Article in journal, Meeting abstract (Other academic) Published
Abstract [en]
Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) may affect the individual’s working life. We aimed to 1) investigate the mean levels and distributions of earnings among people with MS (PwMS) before and after MS diagnosis compared to people without an MS diagnosis, and whether such differences in earnings were associated with educational level or occupation and 2) assess the prevalence of sickness absence (SA) and disability pension (DP).
Methods: Population-based cohort study (10 years prior to 5 years after MS diagnosis) using microdata linked from nationwide Swedish registers of all individuals aged 30-54 with MS diagnosed in 2003-2006 (n = 2553) and references without MS (n = 7584) randomly selected by stratified matching (sex and age). Annual mean earnings, by educational level and type of occupation, were compared with t-tests. Tobit regressions investigated the associations of earnings with individual characteristics. Lastly, the proportions on SA and DP, stratified by educational level and type of occupation, were examined in the diagnosis year and 5 years later.
Results: Differences in earnings between PwMS and references were observed beginning one year prior to diagnosis and increased with time. PwMS had lower mean earnings for the diagnosis year (difference=SEK 28,000, p-value<0.05), and the difference had more than doubled (p-value<0.05) 5 years later. These differences remained after taking educational level and type of occupation into account. PwMS with university education and/or more qualified occupations had mean earnings most like their respective references’. PwMS had higher prevalence of SA and DP than the references, in both the diagnosis year and 5 years later.
Conclusions: Earnings of people with MS were lower than references’ already one year before diagnosis, and the gap increased thereafter. Results indicate that educational level and type of occupation are of importance for earnings. Moreover, SA and DP were more common among people with MS.
Key messages: Our results indicate that working-aged people with MS have less earnings than references already one year before diagnosis and that thereafter this gap in earnings increases with time. Education and occupation were influential in explaining the people with MS’ heterogeneous earnings, with a hierarchal ordering of who maintained similar earnings to their respective peers.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Oxford University Press, 2019. Vol. 29, no Supplement 4, p. 68-
Keywords [en]
heterogeneity, educational status, multiple sclerosis, peer group, pensions, diagnosis, disability, illness, earnings
National Category
Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:rkh:diva-3136DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckz185.169OAI: oai:DiVA.org:rkh-3136DiVA, id: diva2:1393075
Conference
12th European Public Health Conference, Marseille, France, November 20-23, 2019.
2020-02-142020-02-142025-05-23Bibliographically approved