Work and retirement among women: the Health and Employment After Fifty Study
Work and retirement among women: the Health and Employment After Fifty Study
Background: women increasingly work beyond age 50+ but their occupational health is under-researched.
Aims: to investigate what jobs older contemporary women do, when they exit their jobs and what factors predict job exit.
Methods: data came from the Health and Employment After Fifty cohort, which recruited women aged 50–64 at baseline in 2013–14 and has followed them up annually collecting: demographic, lifestyle and work information. Exits from employment were mapped longitudinally over five follow-ups. Time-to-first event Cox regression analyses were used to identify risk factors for job exit.
Results: at baseline, 4436 women participated, 64% of whom were working. The proportions of women working at 50–54, 55–60 and over 60 years were 86%, 79% and 38%, respectively. Amongst all women, after adjustment for age, managing comfortably financially and not coping with the mental demands of the job were associated with exit. Risk factors for job exit differed in the age bands: 50–54; 55–59 and >60 years, reflecting socio-economic status, markers of health (musculoskeletal pain and poor self-rated health) and work factors (under-appreciation, job dissatisfaction, temporary/permanent contracts, coping with work’s physical demands).
Conclusions: factors contributing to exit from work among older women differ by age group, after controlling for perceived financial position, age and mental demands of the job. A number of work characteristics predict job exit and suggest that employers can play an important role in supporting women to continue working until older ages. Identification and treatment of musculoskeletal pain could also enable work amongst older women.
Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Retirement/statistics & numerical data, Employment/statistics & numerical data, Risk Factors, Job Satisfaction, Health Status, Longitudinal Studies, Cohort Studies, Occupational Health
313-322
Palermo, G.
ba24e819-7837-4e7e-be46-1c5d53379752
D'Angelo, S.
b6755c92-c646-4417-ae51-436ae5f196fd
Ntani, G.
9b009e0a-5ab2-4c6e-a9fd-15a601e92be5
Bevilacqua, G.
e93e3b18-7d1e-4da5-9fcd-e6b4637e1c2e
Walker-Bone, K.
ad7d1336-ed2c-4f39-ade5-da84eb412109
23 May 2024
Palermo, G.
ba24e819-7837-4e7e-be46-1c5d53379752
D'Angelo, S.
b6755c92-c646-4417-ae51-436ae5f196fd
Ntani, G.
9b009e0a-5ab2-4c6e-a9fd-15a601e92be5
Bevilacqua, G.
e93e3b18-7d1e-4da5-9fcd-e6b4637e1c2e
Walker-Bone, K.
ad7d1336-ed2c-4f39-ade5-da84eb412109
Palermo, G., D'Angelo, S., Ntani, G., Bevilacqua, G. and Walker-Bone, K.
(2024)
Work and retirement among women: the Health and Employment After Fifty Study.
Occupational medicine (Oxford, England), 74 (4), .
(doi:10.1093/occmed/kqae035).
Abstract
Background: women increasingly work beyond age 50+ but their occupational health is under-researched.
Aims: to investigate what jobs older contemporary women do, when they exit their jobs and what factors predict job exit.
Methods: data came from the Health and Employment After Fifty cohort, which recruited women aged 50–64 at baseline in 2013–14 and has followed them up annually collecting: demographic, lifestyle and work information. Exits from employment were mapped longitudinally over five follow-ups. Time-to-first event Cox regression analyses were used to identify risk factors for job exit.
Results: at baseline, 4436 women participated, 64% of whom were working. The proportions of women working at 50–54, 55–60 and over 60 years were 86%, 79% and 38%, respectively. Amongst all women, after adjustment for age, managing comfortably financially and not coping with the mental demands of the job were associated with exit. Risk factors for job exit differed in the age bands: 50–54; 55–59 and >60 years, reflecting socio-economic status, markers of health (musculoskeletal pain and poor self-rated health) and work factors (under-appreciation, job dissatisfaction, temporary/permanent contracts, coping with work’s physical demands).
Conclusions: factors contributing to exit from work among older women differ by age group, after controlling for perceived financial position, age and mental demands of the job. A number of work characteristics predict job exit and suggest that employers can play an important role in supporting women to continue working until older ages. Identification and treatment of musculoskeletal pain could also enable work amongst older women.
Text
kqae035
- Version of Record
More information
Published date: 23 May 2024
Keywords:
Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Retirement/statistics & numerical data, Employment/statistics & numerical data, Risk Factors, Job Satisfaction, Health Status, Longitudinal Studies, Cohort Studies, Occupational Health
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 500841
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500841
ISSN: 0962-7480
PURE UUID: 7b9dda22-8215-44c9-93d3-767807b725a3
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 14 May 2025 16:30
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:04
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
G. Palermo
Author:
S. D'Angelo
Author:
G. Bevilacqua
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics