CHANGE OF OCCUPATION AND RETIREMENT AMONG SWEDISH FARMERS AND FARM-WORKERS IN RELATION TO THOSE IN OTHER OCCUPATIONS - A STUDY OF ELIMINATION FROM FARMING DURING THE PERIOD 1970-1988

Citation
A. Thelin et S. Hoglund, CHANGE OF OCCUPATION AND RETIREMENT AMONG SWEDISH FARMERS AND FARM-WORKERS IN RELATION TO THOSE IN OTHER OCCUPATIONS - A STUDY OF ELIMINATION FROM FARMING DURING THE PERIOD 1970-1988, Social science & medicine, 38(1), 1994, pp. 147-151
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
Social Sciences, Biomedical
Journal title
ISSN journal
02779536
Volume
38
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
147 - 151
Database
ISI
SICI code
0277-9536(1994)38:1<147:COOARA>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
A number of studies carried out in different countries have shown that farmers have a low morbidity and mortality in comparison to those in other occupations. However, this has been questioned on the basis that some type of selective process may be operating, in that persons havi ng health problems will avoid farming, or are forced to leave farming for other occupations. To determine the occurrence of a so-called 'hea lthy worker effect', this postal survey of 'elimination' from farming and farming-associated occupations has been carried out. A total of 12 83 male farmers and 334 male farm workers born in 1935 and active in S weden in 1970 were taken as the study group. As controls, a similar nu mber of occupationally active men of the same age and living in the sa me municipalities were randomly chosen. The results showed that farmer s changed occupation or retired early less often than those in other o ccupations did, whereas more farm workers changed occupation and retir ed than did other workers of the same age. Among the different reasons given for work change/retirement, low income/poor earning capacity wa s more common among the farmers and farm workers than among the contro ls. Illness was less common among farmers but tended to be more common among farm workers as a cause of work change. Few farmers changed the ir occupation because they were offered other work, incomparison to th ose in other occupations. Allergic disease more often led to an occupa tion change among farmers, while they less often gave cardiac disease and locomotor problems as a reason for change of occupation; this was probably also true for the farm workers. During the period studied, th e farmers were hospitalized less often for psychiatric problems. Fewer farmers were smokers, and those that did smoke, often used relatively less tobacco. Those farmers who changed occupation, smoked nearly as much as the controls. The proportion of smokers was also larger among both the farm workers and the controls who retired, in comparison with those who remained in the same occupation. These results indicated th at the low morbidity and mortality observed among farmers was not due to a selection mechanism among those already established in the occupa tion. Relatively moderate smoking habits probably contributed to the l ow morbidity. Traditions and social factors may also be assumed to hav e a stabilizing effect, counteracting the possibilities of change of o ccupation and retirement.