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Journal Article

Citation

Leigh JP, Fries JF. Am. J. Public Health 1992; 82(11): 1517-1524.

Affiliation

Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Calif.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1992, American Public Health Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

1443303

PMCID

PMC1694609

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We sought to develop lists of jobs whose members reported high and low levels of functional disability. METHODS: Samples of women (n = 6096) and men (n = 3653) were drawn from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I Epidemiological Follow-up. Disability was measured with a modified Stanford Health Assessment Questionnaire. We analyzed women and men separately, and we calculated average disability indices within longest-held occupations while adjusting for age, age-squared, married spouse present, and education. We minimized attrition bias with an econometric technique. RESULTS: From highest to lowest association with disability, the female broad occupations ranking was as follows: farming, no occupation, laborers, service, technicians, operatives, crafts workers, transportation operators, professionals, sales workers, administrative support, and managers. The male broad occupations ranking was as follows: no occupation, farming, operatives, crafts workers, service, technicians, manager, administrative support, sales, and professionals. The highest levels of disability for women and men occurred among nonconstruction laborers, farm workers, twisting machine operators, servants, machinery maintenance workers, mining machine operators, and bus drivers. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that, in understanding levels of functional disability, occupational safety and health play a larger role than is generally assumed.


Language: en

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