Abstract
The study objective was to assess sick-leave among women investigated in a general population survey of alcohol dependence/abuse (ADA). A total of 399 women, selected by stratified random sampling, were interviewed and diagnosed according to DSM-III-R. Data on sick-leave were obtained by linkage with the Social Insurance records. The study found that women with ADA but without other psychiatric disorders had an increased number of annual sick-leave spells – 1.82 compared with 1.47 in the reference population – whereas the mean duration was similar. Women with ADA and other psychiatric disorders had 2.38 annual spells, but also considerably longer spells (mean 16.54 days vs 9.70). Socio-economic differences were large, with the less privileged groups having both more and longer spells. Stepwise multiple regression showed that both ADA and other psychiatric disorders contributed to high sick-leave incidence and duration, as, to a lesser extent, did low education and low social group (the last variable only affected duration of the spells). The frequency of disability pension/long sickness spells was higher in women with ADA (odds ratio of 2.95). We concluded that there is a strong association between ADA and sick-leave, which increases considerably in the presence of additional psychiatric disorders.
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Accepted: 6 April 1998
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Spak, F., Hensing, G. & Allebeck, P. Sick-leave in women with alcohol dependence or abuse: effects of additional psychiatric disorders. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 33, 613–619 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s001270050101
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s001270050101