Abstract

We examined the trajectories of work disability before and after IHD and stroke events. New IHD (n = 13521) and stroke (n = 7162) cases in 2006–2008 were retrieved from nationwide Swedish hospital records and their annual work disability days five years before and after the date of diagnosis were retrieved from a nationwide disability register. There was no pre-event differences in disability days between the IHD and stroke cases and five years prior to the event, they were close to those observed in the general population. In the first post-event year, the adjusted mean days increased to 83.9 (95% CI 80.6–86.5) in IHD; to 179.5 (95% CI 172.4–186.8) in stroke, a six-fold increase in IHD and 14-fold in stroke. Work disability leveled off among the IHD cases but not among those who had stroke. The highest disability levels for the fifth post-event year after a stroke event was associated with pre-existing diabetes (146.9), mental disorder (141.2), non-employment (137.0), and immigrant status (117.9). In a working-age population, the increase in work disability after a cardiovascular event decreases close to the pre-event level in IHD but remains particularly high after stroke; among patients with comorbid depression or diabetes, immigrants, and those not in employment.

Highlights

  • Ischemic heart disease (IHD) and cerebrovascular diseases are the leading causes of disability and premature death worldwide[1, 2]

  • We found significant interactions between event type (IHD versus stroke) and the following baseline characteristics associated with the level of mean work disability days; birth country, economic activity, mental disorder and diabetes in the first post-event year (P = 0.002; P = 0.022; P < 0.0001; P = 0.036, respectively)

  • The present study examined ten-year trajectories of work disability around major cardiovascular events, IHD and stroke

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Summary

Results

The risk of sickness absence among the non-employed was approximately twice that of the employed during the pre-event period, a similar difference to that seen among the IHD and stroke groups (Fig. 2, Panels C and D) This difference disappeared during the first post-event year (among the stroke cases, the non-employed had a lower rate of work disability compared to the employed (RR = 0.81). We found significant interactions between event type (IHD versus stroke) and the following baseline characteristics associated with the level of mean work disability days; birth country, economic activity, mental disorder and diabetes in the first post-event year (P = 0.002; P = 0.022; P < 0.0001; P = 0.036, respectively). The significant interactions support the finding which showed, for example, that the difference in work disability between patients with and without mental disorders almost disappeared among stroke patients during the first post-event year while among IHD patients, only a modest reduction was observed

Discussion
Data and Methods
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