The risk and development of work disability among individuals with gambling disorder: a longitudinal case-cohort study in Sweden

This longitudinal register study aimed to investigate the association between gambling disorder (GD) and work disability and to map work disability in subgroups of individuals with GD, three years before and three years after diagnosis. We included individuals aged 19-62 with GD between 2005 and 201...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological medicine 2024-05, Vol.54 (7), p.1391-1402
Hauptverfasser: Månsson, Viktor, Pettersson, Emma, Mittendorfer-Rutz, Ellenor, Guterstam, Joar, Berman, Anne H, Jayaram-Lindström, Nitya, Molero, Yasmina
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container_end_page 1402
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1391
container_title Psychological medicine
container_volume 54
creator Månsson, Viktor
Pettersson, Emma
Mittendorfer-Rutz, Ellenor
Guterstam, Joar
Berman, Anne H
Jayaram-Lindström, Nitya
Molero, Yasmina
description This longitudinal register study aimed to investigate the association between gambling disorder (GD) and work disability and to map work disability in subgroups of individuals with GD, three years before and three years after diagnosis. We included individuals aged 19-62 with GD between 2005 and 2018 ( = 2830; 71.1% men, mean age: 35.1) and a matched comparison cohort ( = 28 300). Work disability was operationalized as the aggregated net days of sickness absence and disability pension. Generalized estimating equation models were used to calculate adjusted odds ratios (AORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the risk of long-term work disability (>90 days of work disability/year). Secondly, we conducted Group-based Trajectory Models on days of work disability. Individuals with GD showed a four-year increased risk of long-term work disability compared to the matched cohort, peaking at the time of diagnosis (AOR = 1.89; CI 1.67-2.13). Four trajectory groups of work disability days were identified: (60.3%, 5.6-11.2 days), (11.4%, 11.8-152.5 days), (11.1%, 65.1-110 days), and (17.1%, 264-331 days). Individuals who were females, older, with prior psychiatric diagnosis, and had been dispensed a psychotropic medication, particularly antidepressants, were more likely to be assigned to groups other than the . Individuals with GD have an increased risk of work disability which may add financial and social pressure and is an additional incentive for earlier detection and prevention of GD.
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We included individuals aged 19-62 with GD between 2005 and 2018 ( = 2830; 71.1% men, mean age: 35.1) and a matched comparison cohort ( = 28 300). Work disability was operationalized as the aggregated net days of sickness absence and disability pension. Generalized estimating equation models were used to calculate adjusted odds ratios (AORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the risk of long-term work disability (&gt;90 days of work disability/year). Secondly, we conducted Group-based Trajectory Models on days of work disability. Individuals with GD showed a four-year increased risk of long-term work disability compared to the matched cohort, peaking at the time of diagnosis (AOR = 1.89; CI 1.67-2.13). Four trajectory groups of work disability days were identified: (60.3%, 5.6-11.2 days), (11.4%, 11.8-152.5 days), (11.1%, 65.1-110 days), and (17.1%, 264-331 days). 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; SWEPUB Freely available online; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Adult
Age
Antidepressants
Cohort analysis
Cohort Studies
Country of birth
Diagnosis
Disability pensions
Disabled Persons
Drugs
Educational attainment
Employment
Female
Gambling
Gambling - epidemiology
Humans
Labor market
Long term
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Medical diagnosis
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Mortality
Online gambling
Pensions
Population
Psychotropic drugs
Sick Leave
Social pressure
Sweden - epidemiology
Work
title The risk and development of work disability among individuals with gambling disorder: a longitudinal case-cohort study in Sweden
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