Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Job loss, not recession, ups death risk

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Jul, 2014 10:04 AM
    If we believe US researchers, job loss is associated with a 73 percent increase in the probability of death - the equivalent of adding 10 years to a person's age.
     
    However, this increased death risk affects only a minority of the people who are unemployed.
     
    It is outweighed by health-promoting effects of an economic slowdown that affect the entire population such as a drop in traffic fatalities and reduced atmospheric pollution, they said.
     
    Each percentage-point increase in the individual's state unemployment rate, researchers found, reduced the hazard of death by nearly nine percent - that is about the equivalent of making a person one year younger.
     
    "Most people believe that being unemployed is a bad thing. But what many people do not realise is that economic expansions - which usually reduce joblessness - also have effects that are harmful for society at large," said Jose Tapia, an economist with Drexel University's college of arts and sciences.
     
    Using data from the US Department of Labor and annual survey data of the years 1979-1997, researchers from Drexel University and University of Michigan in Ann Arbor created models in which the hazard or probability of death was statistically estimated.
     
    "The results reveal that joblessness strongly and significantly raises the risk of death among those suffering it," researchers said.
     
    The periods of higher unemployment rates such as recession are associated with a moderate but significant reduction in the risk of death among the entire population, they found.
     
    The increase in the risk of death associated with individual joblessness may be related to stress and depression, Tapia said.
     
    Atmospheric pollution - which strongly increases in economic upturns and diminishes in recession - may be one of several important mechanisms explaining why population mortality tends to decrease when the economy stagnates, he added in the study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Bees create mental maps to reach home

    Bees create mental maps to reach home
    We have long wondered at the complex navigation abilities of the bees who use the sun as a compass. But bees do memorise a mental map too, like humans, despite their much smaller brain size, new research reveals adding a whole new dimension to complex bee-navigation abilities that have long fascinated scientists.

    Bees create mental maps to reach home

    Car buyers ready to give up sex than haggle over prices: Study

    Car buyers ready to give up sex than haggle over prices: Study
    What has purchasing a car and sex in common? Well, give your wavering thoughts a rest here as some Americans feel that it is better to give up sex than haggle over the price of a car!

    Car buyers ready to give up sex than haggle over prices: Study

    Night owls run great risk of becoming couch potatoes

    Night owls run great risk of becoming couch potatoes
    Do you stay up late at night busy surfing internet or chatting on your smart phone and wake up only when morning turns into noon?

    Night owls run great risk of becoming couch potatoes

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.
    Apart from late-night parties, good night's sleep and some real action, the time between midnight to 4 a.m. is also known for another thing - suicide.

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.

    Anti-diabetic drug may slow aging too

    Anti-diabetic drug may slow aging too
    Keeping the years off your face may soon become a lot easier as researchers have now discovered new evidence that anti-diabetic drug metformin slows aging and increases lifespan.

    Anti-diabetic drug may slow aging too

    Stressed mothers may affect behaviour of the unborn

    Stressed mothers may affect behaviour of the unborn
    Stress during pregnancy can affect the baby in your womb in many ways as researchers have found that foetuses are more likely to show left-handed movements in the womb when their mothers are stressed.

    Stressed mothers may affect behaviour of the unborn