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  • Volume 75, Issue 1 >
  • Abstract

Alcohol-Related Morbidity and Mortality Following Involuntary Job Loss: Evidence From Swedish Register Data

Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 75(1), 35–46 (2014).

Marcus Eliason , Ph.D.a*
+ Affiliations
aInstitute for Evaluation of Labour Market and Education Policy (IFAU), Uppsala, Sweden
*Correspondence may be sent to Marcus Eliason at the Institute for Evaluation of Labour Market and Education Policy (IFAU), P.O. Box 513, SE-751 20 Uppsala, Sweden, or via email at: marcus.eliason@ifau.uu.se.
https://doi.org/10.15288/jsad.2014.75.35
Received: February 26, 2013
Accepted: June 11, 2013
Published Online: January 21, 2015
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Abstract
Objective:

The purpose of this study was to assess the association between involuntary job loss and alcohol-attributable morbidity and mortality.

Method:

Swedish linked employee–employer data were used to identify all establishment closures during 1990–1999, as well as the employees who were laid off and a comparison group. These data were merged with information on alcohol-attributable deaths and hospital admissions from the Causes of Death Register and the National Patient Register. The associations between job loss and alcohol-attributable morbidity and mortality during a follow-up period of 12 years were estimated by propensity score weighting methods.

Results:

An excess risk of both alcohol-related hospitalization and mortality was found among both displaced men and women. For women, the wholly alcohol-attributable health problems were mainly limited to alcohol use disorders, whereas men also had an increased risk of hospitalization from poisoning and alcohol-induced liver disease and pancreatitis.

Conclusions:

The findings support previous evidence of increased risks of alcohol-related morbidity/mortality following involuntary job loss, although the estimates presented herein are more conservative. In addition, the findings suggest that alcohol-related problems manifest somewhat differently in men and women.

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