Abstract

Objective Most suicides occur among individuals of working age. Risk is elevated in some occupational groups, however relations between long-term occupational trajectories and suicide are not well known. We describe career-long occupational trajectories and examine their influence on suicide. Methods Data come from GAZEL, a French cohort study set among employees of a large national utilities company. Occupational grade was obtained from company records from the time of hiring (1953‒1988). Group-based trajectory models were used to define occupational trajectories over a mean time period of 25.0 (standard deviation 6.5) years. Causes of mortality, coded using the International Classification of Diseases, were recorded from 1993‒2014 and studied using Cox regression models. Results Of the 20 452 participants included in the study, 73 died by suicide between 1993‒2014. Results suggested an increased risk of suicide [hazard ratio (HR) 2.57, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.08-6.15] among participants with persistently low occupational grade compared to those with higher occupational grade and career development. After adjustment for all covariates, especially psychological factors, this association was reduced and no longer statistically significant (HR 2.02, 95% CI 0.82-4.95). Conclusions Persistently low occupational grade could be related to an elevated risk of suicide. This association partly reflects psychological and health characteristics, which can influence occupational trajectories and be reinforced by unfavorable work conditions.

Highlights

  • Persistently low occupational grade could be related to an elevated risk of suicide

  • Work is protective: individuals seeking employment have a higher risk of suicide than those who are employed [2]

  • The majority of suicides occur among individuals who are working [3] and some trades appear to confer especially high risk [4]

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Summary

Methods

Data come from GAZEL, a French cohort study set among employees of a large national utilities company. Employees were hired when they were in their 20s and stayed with the company until retirement (usually around 55 years of age). This offers the unique opportunity to characterize participants’ occupational trajectories across their whole career. In 1989, GAZEL recruited 20 625 volunteers (15 011 men and 5614 women), aged 35–50 years, who since receive an annual questionnaire collecting data on health, lifestyle, individual, familial, social, occupational risk factors and life events. The GAZEL study received approval from the national commission overseeing ethical data collection in France (Commission Nationale Informatique et Libertés)

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