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The Health of Older Workers – Implications for Future Labour Participation 11 th Global Conference of the International Federation of Aging 28 May to 1 st June, 2012 Dr Jennifer Buckley Dr Lisel O’Dwyer Professor Graeme Hugo University of Adelaide, Australian Population and Migration Research Centre
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Overview Rationale for the study Project overview Methods Baby boomers’ labour participation in context Health and workforce attachment Workplace environments Implications for Policy and Research
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Population Ageing in Australia Projected Population Aged Under 15 Years, Australia, 2002-2101 Projected Population Aged 65 Years and Over, Australia, 2002-2101 Source: ABS, Catalogue No. 3222.0, 2003, p85
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Rationale for the Study Fewer new entrants to labour market Increase and extend labour participation in older age groups Health – underpins labour market capacity Health research – disease/disability/burden on health system Work-related research – skills training and workplace management Need for more research on the health/work
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Project Overview ‘Australia’s Baby Boomer Generation: Obesity and Work – Patterns, Causes and Implications’ Key objective – explore interactions between health and work Aim – provide a health perspective for work-related policies on older workers Baby boomers – A distinct policy group – Amplify the effects of population ageing – Significant impact as they exit the workforce Today’s presentation – preliminary exploration of data
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Methods Labour Participation Data - Census data 1981 and 2006; ABS Labour Force Surveys Health & Work Data - North West Adelaide Health Study (NWAHS) (n=4060)
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Geographical Context
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Data and Study Population Labour Participation Data - Census data 1981 and 2006; ABS Labour Force Surveys Health & Work Data - North West Adelaide Health Study (NWAHS) (n=4060) Sample - Baby Boomers born 1946-1965 drawn from the NWAHS NWAHS Data - Stage 1, 1999-2002; Stage 2, 2004-06; Stage 3, 2010 Stage 2, 2004-06 (n=1195) Baby Boomer Work Project, 2011 (BBs n=874; Gen X n=768) Analyses By all baby boomers By gender By older (1946-55) and younger (1956-65) baby boomers Data Chronic conditions – clinic and self report Social data and self-rated health - Self repor ted
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Trends in Participation of Older Workers Age Groups: 55-59; 60-64; 65+ Source: ABS Labour Force Surveys
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Employment Status 45-54 Year Olds in 1981 and 2006 Source: ABS Census, 1981; 2006b
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Employment Status Baby Boomers 1946-1965 Source: NWAHS TFU Survey 2 (CATI), 2007
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Factors Influencing Labour Participation in Older Workers Age discrimination Lack of access to re-training Personal commitments Financial security Desire for more leisure Low education levels
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Education by Age Cohort and Gender in Baby Boomers 1946-55 and 1956-65 Source: NWAHS Stage 2, 2004-06 13.7% 5.4% 20.2% 8.8 %
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Employment Status Females by Age Cohort and Education Level – NWAHS Baby Boomers 1946-55 and 1956-65 Note: Retired, unemployed and ‘other’ categories excluded. Source: NWAHS Stage 2, 2004-06
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Employment Status Females by Education Level – Census Baby Boomers - 1946-55 and 1956-65 Source: ABS 2006 Census (Australia) (ABS 2006c)
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Employment by Self-Rated Health Baby Boomers 1946-1965 *p<.05; **p<.001 Source: NWAHS TFU Survey 2 (CATI), 2007 ** *
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Labour Participation and Self-Rated Health by Age Cohort Baby Boomers - 1946-55 and 1956-65 1 In the labour force=f/time, p/time, casual, unemployed; 2 Not in the labour force=retired, home duties, unable to work **p<.001 Source: NWAHS TFU Survey 2 (CATI), 2007 **
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Percentage of Each Employment Category with Selected Chronic Conditions Baby Boomers 1946-64 Source: NWAHS Stage 2, 2004-06; NWAHS TFU Survey 2 (CATI), 2007
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Odds Ratios for Reporting Not In the Labour Force by Chronic Condition and Age Cohort Baby Boomers - 1946-55 and 1956-65 *p<.05; Source: NWAHS TFU Survey 2 (CATI), 2007 ** 5.4 * 2.1 * 2.4 * 2.2 * 3.3 * 2.6
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Odds Ratios for Reporting Not in the Labour Force by Chronic Condition and Gender Baby Boomers 1946-1965 *p<.05; **p<.001 Source: NWAHS TFU Survey 2 (CATI), 2007 ** 3.1 * 2.8 * 3.7 * 2.8 * 2.0 ** 4.4 * 2.7 14.4% 8.8%
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Variable Work Conditions &Self-Rated Health Baby Boomers 1946-1965 *p<.05; Source: NWAHS TFU Survey 2 (CATI), 2007 ** 3.1 * 2.8 * 3.7 * 2.8 * 2.0 ** 4.4 * 2.7 *
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Self-Rated Health and Job Strain Baby Boomers - 1946-1965 **p<.001 Source: NWAHS Work Data (CATI), 2011 **
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Job Satisfaction and Self-Rated Health Baby Boomers 1946-1965 *p<.05; Source: NWAHS Work Data (CATI), 2011 * *
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Flexibility and Job Satisfaction Baby Boomers - 1946-1965 **p<.05 Source: NWAHS Work Data (CATI), 2011 *
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Variability and Job Satisfaction Baby Boomers - 1946-1965 ^ p=<.1 Source: NWAHS Work Data (CATI), 2011 ^
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Satisfaction with Work-Life Balance by Self-Rated Health Baby Boomers - 1946-1965 ** *p<.001; Source: NWAHS Work Data (CATI), 2011
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Co-worker Support in the Workplace – ‘People I work with are helpful in getting the job done’ Baby Boomers 1946-1965 *p<.001; Source: NWAHS Work Data (CATI), 2011 **
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Workplace Support for Healthy Behaviours by Self Rated Health Baby Boomers - 1946-1965 Source: NWAHS Work Data (CATI), 2011
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Future Research Interface between depression and employment status Workforce exit decisions of older workers with chronic conditions Workplace Interventions to facilitate better health
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Implications for Policy Impact of poor health on workforce exits – 44% of older boomers with poor SRH NILF = 9.9% of this sub-cohort – 18.2% of younger boomers with poor/fair SRH NILF = 3.4% of this sub-cohort Primary and secondary prevention strategies Workplace policies and culture Labour market conditions
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Contact Details and Acknowledgments Acknowledgements This project was funded by an Australian Council Research Linkage Grant Contact Details Jennifer Buckley Email: jennifer.buckley@adelaide.edu.aujennifer.buckley@adelaide.edu.au
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Australia’s GDP per capita in 2009 was around $924.84 billion
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