Long working hours and risk of 50 health conditions and mortality outcomes: a multicohort study in four European countries

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Long working hours and risk of 50 health conditions and mortality outcomes : a multicohort study in four European countries. / Ervasti, Jenni; Pentti, Jaana; Nyberg, Solja T.; Shipley, Martin J.; Leineweber, Constanze; Sørensen, Jeppe K.; Alfredsson, Lars; Bjorner, Jakob B.; Borritz, Marianne; Burr, Hermann; Knutsson, Anders; Madsen, Ida E.H.; Magnusson Hanson, Linda L.; Oksanen, Tuula; Pejtersen, Jan H.; Rugulies, Reiner; Suominen, Sakari; Theorell, Töres; Westerlund, Hugo; Vahtera, Jussi; Virtanen, Marianna; Batty, G. David; Kivimäki, Mika.

In: The Lancet Regional Health - Europe, Vol. 11, 100212, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ervasti, J, Pentti, J, Nyberg, ST, Shipley, MJ, Leineweber, C, Sørensen, JK, Alfredsson, L, Bjorner, JB, Borritz, M, Burr, H, Knutsson, A, Madsen, IEH, Magnusson Hanson, LL, Oksanen, T, Pejtersen, JH, Rugulies, R, Suominen, S, Theorell, T, Westerlund, H, Vahtera, J, Virtanen, M, Batty, GD & Kivimäki, M 2021, 'Long working hours and risk of 50 health conditions and mortality outcomes: a multicohort study in four European countries', The Lancet Regional Health - Europe, vol. 11, 100212. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100212

APA

Ervasti, J., Pentti, J., Nyberg, S. T., Shipley, M. J., Leineweber, C., Sørensen, J. K., Alfredsson, L., Bjorner, J. B., Borritz, M., Burr, H., Knutsson, A., Madsen, I. E. H., Magnusson Hanson, L. L., Oksanen, T., Pejtersen, J. H., Rugulies, R., Suominen, S., Theorell, T., Westerlund, H., ... Kivimäki, M. (2021). Long working hours and risk of 50 health conditions and mortality outcomes: a multicohort study in four European countries. The Lancet Regional Health - Europe, 11, [100212]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100212

Vancouver

Ervasti J, Pentti J, Nyberg ST, Shipley MJ, Leineweber C, Sørensen JK et al. Long working hours and risk of 50 health conditions and mortality outcomes: a multicohort study in four European countries. The Lancet Regional Health - Europe. 2021;11. 100212. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100212

Author

Ervasti, Jenni ; Pentti, Jaana ; Nyberg, Solja T. ; Shipley, Martin J. ; Leineweber, Constanze ; Sørensen, Jeppe K. ; Alfredsson, Lars ; Bjorner, Jakob B. ; Borritz, Marianne ; Burr, Hermann ; Knutsson, Anders ; Madsen, Ida E.H. ; Magnusson Hanson, Linda L. ; Oksanen, Tuula ; Pejtersen, Jan H. ; Rugulies, Reiner ; Suominen, Sakari ; Theorell, Töres ; Westerlund, Hugo ; Vahtera, Jussi ; Virtanen, Marianna ; Batty, G. David ; Kivimäki, Mika. / Long working hours and risk of 50 health conditions and mortality outcomes : a multicohort study in four European countries. In: The Lancet Regional Health - Europe. 2021 ; Vol. 11.

Bibtex

@article{345c7d0e56804446985b90805c6e0f34,
title = "Long working hours and risk of 50 health conditions and mortality outcomes: a multicohort study in four European countries",
abstract = "Background: Studies on the association between long working hours and health have captured only a narrow range of outcomes (mainly cardiometabolic diseases and depression) and no outcome-wide studies on this topic are available. To achieve wider scope of potential harm, we examined long working hours as a risk factor for a wide range of disease and mortality endpoints. Methods: The data of this multicohort study were from two population cohorts from Finland (primary analysis, n=59 599) and nine cohorts (replication analysis, n=44 262) from Sweden, Denmark, and the UK, all part of the Individual-participant Meta-analysis in Working Populations (IPD-Work) consortium. Baseline-assessed long working hours (≥55 hours per week) were compared to standard working hours (35-40 h). Outcome measures with follow-up until age 65 years were 46 diseases that required hospital treatment or continuous pharmacotherapy, all-cause, and three cause-specific mortality endpoints, ascertained via linkage to national health and mortality registers. Findings: 2747 (4·6%) participants in the primary cohorts and 3027 (6·8%) in the replication cohorts worked long hours. After adjustment for age, sex, and socioeconomic status, working long hours was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular death (hazard ratio 1·68; 95% confidence interval 1·08-2·61 in primary analysis and 1·52; 0·90-2·58 in replication analysis), infections (1·37; 1·13-1·67 and 1·45; 1·13-1·87), diabetes (1·18; 1·01-1·38 and 1·41; 0·98-2·02), injuries (1·22; 1·00-1·50 and 1·18; 0·98-1·18) and musculoskeletal disorders (1·15; 1·06-1·26 and 1·13; 1·00-1·27). Working long hours was not associated with all-cause mortality. Interpretation: Follow-up of 50 health outcomes in four European countries suggests that working long hours is associated with an elevated risk of early cardiovascular death and hospital-treated infections before age 65. Associations, albeit weak, were also observed with diabetes, musculoskeletal disorders and injuries. In these data working long hours was not related to elevated overall mortality. Funding: NordForsk, the Medical Research Council, the National Institute on Aging, the Wellcome Trust, Academy of Finland, and Finnish Work Environment Fund.",
author = "Jenni Ervasti and Jaana Pentti and Nyberg, {Solja T.} and Shipley, {Martin J.} and Constanze Leineweber and S{\o}rensen, {Jeppe K.} and Lars Alfredsson and Bjorner, {Jakob B.} and Marianne Borritz and Hermann Burr and Anders Knutsson and Madsen, {Ida E.H.} and {Magnusson Hanson}, {Linda L.} and Tuula Oksanen and Pejtersen, {Jan H.} and Reiner Rugulies and Sakari Suominen and T{\"o}res Theorell and Hugo Westerlund and Jussi Vahtera and Marianna Virtanen and Batty, {G. David} and Mika Kivim{\"a}ki",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 The Authors",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100212",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "The Lancet Regional Health - Europe",
issn = "2666-7762",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Long working hours and risk of 50 health conditions and mortality outcomes

T2 - a multicohort study in four European countries

AU - Ervasti, Jenni

AU - Pentti, Jaana

AU - Nyberg, Solja T.

AU - Shipley, Martin J.

AU - Leineweber, Constanze

AU - Sørensen, Jeppe K.

AU - Alfredsson, Lars

AU - Bjorner, Jakob B.

AU - Borritz, Marianne

AU - Burr, Hermann

AU - Knutsson, Anders

AU - Madsen, Ida E.H.

AU - Magnusson Hanson, Linda L.

AU - Oksanen, Tuula

AU - Pejtersen, Jan H.

AU - Rugulies, Reiner

AU - Suominen, Sakari

AU - Theorell, Töres

AU - Westerlund, Hugo

AU - Vahtera, Jussi

AU - Virtanen, Marianna

AU - Batty, G. David

AU - Kivimäki, Mika

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Background: Studies on the association between long working hours and health have captured only a narrow range of outcomes (mainly cardiometabolic diseases and depression) and no outcome-wide studies on this topic are available. To achieve wider scope of potential harm, we examined long working hours as a risk factor for a wide range of disease and mortality endpoints. Methods: The data of this multicohort study were from two population cohorts from Finland (primary analysis, n=59 599) and nine cohorts (replication analysis, n=44 262) from Sweden, Denmark, and the UK, all part of the Individual-participant Meta-analysis in Working Populations (IPD-Work) consortium. Baseline-assessed long working hours (≥55 hours per week) were compared to standard working hours (35-40 h). Outcome measures with follow-up until age 65 years were 46 diseases that required hospital treatment or continuous pharmacotherapy, all-cause, and three cause-specific mortality endpoints, ascertained via linkage to national health and mortality registers. Findings: 2747 (4·6%) participants in the primary cohorts and 3027 (6·8%) in the replication cohorts worked long hours. After adjustment for age, sex, and socioeconomic status, working long hours was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular death (hazard ratio 1·68; 95% confidence interval 1·08-2·61 in primary analysis and 1·52; 0·90-2·58 in replication analysis), infections (1·37; 1·13-1·67 and 1·45; 1·13-1·87), diabetes (1·18; 1·01-1·38 and 1·41; 0·98-2·02), injuries (1·22; 1·00-1·50 and 1·18; 0·98-1·18) and musculoskeletal disorders (1·15; 1·06-1·26 and 1·13; 1·00-1·27). Working long hours was not associated with all-cause mortality. Interpretation: Follow-up of 50 health outcomes in four European countries suggests that working long hours is associated with an elevated risk of early cardiovascular death and hospital-treated infections before age 65. Associations, albeit weak, were also observed with diabetes, musculoskeletal disorders and injuries. In these data working long hours was not related to elevated overall mortality. Funding: NordForsk, the Medical Research Council, the National Institute on Aging, the Wellcome Trust, Academy of Finland, and Finnish Work Environment Fund.

AB - Background: Studies on the association between long working hours and health have captured only a narrow range of outcomes (mainly cardiometabolic diseases and depression) and no outcome-wide studies on this topic are available. To achieve wider scope of potential harm, we examined long working hours as a risk factor for a wide range of disease and mortality endpoints. Methods: The data of this multicohort study were from two population cohorts from Finland (primary analysis, n=59 599) and nine cohorts (replication analysis, n=44 262) from Sweden, Denmark, and the UK, all part of the Individual-participant Meta-analysis in Working Populations (IPD-Work) consortium. Baseline-assessed long working hours (≥55 hours per week) were compared to standard working hours (35-40 h). Outcome measures with follow-up until age 65 years were 46 diseases that required hospital treatment or continuous pharmacotherapy, all-cause, and three cause-specific mortality endpoints, ascertained via linkage to national health and mortality registers. Findings: 2747 (4·6%) participants in the primary cohorts and 3027 (6·8%) in the replication cohorts worked long hours. After adjustment for age, sex, and socioeconomic status, working long hours was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular death (hazard ratio 1·68; 95% confidence interval 1·08-2·61 in primary analysis and 1·52; 0·90-2·58 in replication analysis), infections (1·37; 1·13-1·67 and 1·45; 1·13-1·87), diabetes (1·18; 1·01-1·38 and 1·41; 0·98-2·02), injuries (1·22; 1·00-1·50 and 1·18; 0·98-1·18) and musculoskeletal disorders (1·15; 1·06-1·26 and 1·13; 1·00-1·27). Working long hours was not associated with all-cause mortality. Interpretation: Follow-up of 50 health outcomes in four European countries suggests that working long hours is associated with an elevated risk of early cardiovascular death and hospital-treated infections before age 65. Associations, albeit weak, were also observed with diabetes, musculoskeletal disorders and injuries. In these data working long hours was not related to elevated overall mortality. Funding: NordForsk, the Medical Research Council, the National Institute on Aging, the Wellcome Trust, Academy of Finland, and Finnish Work Environment Fund.

U2 - 10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100212

DO - 10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100212

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34917998

AN - SCOPUS:85120606095

VL - 11

JO - The Lancet Regional Health - Europe

JF - The Lancet Regional Health - Europe

SN - 2666-7762

M1 - 100212

ER -

ID: 286987832