Physical functioning trajectories over statutory retirement: a finnish occupational cohort study
Saha, Pauliina; Salmela, Jatta; Hiilamo, Aapo; Aho, Anna Liisa; Lallukka, Tea (2025-01-10)
Saha, Pauliina
Salmela, Jatta
Hiilamo, Aapo
Aho, Anna Liisa
Lallukka, Tea
10.01.2025
ARCHIVES OF PUBLIC HEALTH
8
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202501311851
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202501311851
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Background: The association of workload and performance with physical functioning is recognised among the ageing public sector workforce. The characteristics of working conditions and social- and health-related factors associated with physical functioning after statutory retirement are still unknown. Also, previous studies on changes in physical functioning have not used a person-oriented approach. We examined physical functioning trajectories over statutory retirement and how social- and health-related factors are associated with them. Our aim was to identify distinct developmental trajectories of physical functioning over statutory retirement and to examine how social- (age, gender, marital status, education) and health-related (physical workload, self-reported sleep problems, alcohol consumption, smoking, fruit and vegetable (F&V) consumption, leisure-time physical activity (LTPA), and body mass index (BMI)) factors before retirement were associated with the identified trajectories. Methods: We used data from the Helsinki Health Study cohort. Participants consisted of 2736 employees of the City of Helsinki, Finland who retired during the follow-up. Growth mixture modelling was used to identify physical functioning trajectories and multinominal regression analyses to examine associations of social- and health-related factors with them. Results: Three distinct developmental patterns in physical functioning before and after retirement were found among ageing and retired employees. Lower educational level, sleep problems, physical inactivity, and obesity were associated with the trajectory groups of ‘fast decreasing’ and ‘slowly increasing’, compared to the ‘stable high’ trajectory. Conclusion: The results suggest that poor social- and health-related factors are key risk factors associated with declining and lower-level physical functioning over the retirement period. Supporting healthy lifestyles among older employees might maintaining good physical functioning until retirement and beyond.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [20263]