Health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in Northern Ireland. An administrative data study.

Background Northern Ireland consistently experiences a higher rate of economic inactivity compared to other regions of the UK, currently 27% of the working age population compared to 22% in the UK. Historically, the major variance in explaining higher NI economic inactivity rates has been larger...

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Main Authors: Ana Corina Miller, Dermot O’Reilly, David Wright, Foteini Tseliou, Michael Rosato, Aideen Mcguire
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2019-11-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/1189
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spelling doaj-a499550bc8b341f894f003b7a954c6ce2020-11-24T21:56:57ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082019-11-014310.23889/ijpds.v4i3.1189Health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in Northern Ireland. An administrative data study.Ana Corina Miller0Dermot O’Reilly1David Wright2Foteini Tseliou3Michael Rosato4Aideen Mcguire5Queen's UniversityQueen's UniversityQueen's UniversityQueen's UniversityUlster UniversityQueen's University Background Northern Ireland consistently experiences a higher rate of economic inactivity compared to other regions of the UK, currently 27% of the working age population compared to 22% in the UK. Historically, the major variance in explaining higher NI economic inactivity rates has been larger proportions of long-term sick/disabled. Only 34.7% of the NI population with a disability are employed compared to 77.9% of the non-disabled population. Aim The aims were to explore the relationship between chronic health status and the labour-market in NI, and how receipt of DLA is associated with economic inactivity. Methods This study links the 2011-NI-Census records, DLA-dataset, death registrations for the Census population, settlement-band data, the Land and Property Service capital-valuation of property, and the NI-Multiple-Deprivation Measure. The economically active population was defined as all individuals that were either employed or unemployed but looking for a job at the time of the 2011-Census. Results Men with mental-health conditions reporting a lot of limitation in day-to-day activities are almost 51 times more likely to be economically inactive compared to men with no health condition (ORadj=50.99, 95%CI:46.8,55.6). Learning/mental-health conditions are more likely to be associated with economic inactivity in both women and men compared to physical health conditions, such as long-term pain, mobility or breathing difficulties. Individuals in receipt of DLA are more than twice as likely to be economically inactive as their peers who are not in receipt of DLA. Conclusion Individuals with mental-health conditions reporting a lot of limitation in day-to-day activities have the lowest rates of participation in the labour-market. A lot of limitation in the day-to-day activities appears to be strongly associated with economic inactivity regardless of the health condition. DLA uptake is associated with considerably reduced likelihood of being economically active overall while the health conditions underlying DLA uptake are strong barriers to access the labour-market in NI. https://ijpds.org/article/view/1189
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ana Corina Miller
Dermot O’Reilly
David Wright
Foteini Tseliou
Michael Rosato
Aideen Mcguire
spellingShingle Ana Corina Miller
Dermot O’Reilly
David Wright
Foteini Tseliou
Michael Rosato
Aideen Mcguire
Health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in Northern Ireland. An administrative data study.
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Ana Corina Miller
Dermot O’Reilly
David Wright
Foteini Tseliou
Michael Rosato
Aideen Mcguire
author_sort Ana Corina Miller
title Health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in Northern Ireland. An administrative data study.
title_short Health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in Northern Ireland. An administrative data study.
title_full Health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in Northern Ireland. An administrative data study.
title_fullStr Health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in Northern Ireland. An administrative data study.
title_full_unstemmed Health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in Northern Ireland. An administrative data study.
title_sort health conditions, disability and economic inactivity in northern ireland. an administrative data study.
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Background Northern Ireland consistently experiences a higher rate of economic inactivity compared to other regions of the UK, currently 27% of the working age population compared to 22% in the UK. Historically, the major variance in explaining higher NI economic inactivity rates has been larger proportions of long-term sick/disabled. Only 34.7% of the NI population with a disability are employed compared to 77.9% of the non-disabled population. Aim The aims were to explore the relationship between chronic health status and the labour-market in NI, and how receipt of DLA is associated with economic inactivity. Methods This study links the 2011-NI-Census records, DLA-dataset, death registrations for the Census population, settlement-band data, the Land and Property Service capital-valuation of property, and the NI-Multiple-Deprivation Measure. The economically active population was defined as all individuals that were either employed or unemployed but looking for a job at the time of the 2011-Census. Results Men with mental-health conditions reporting a lot of limitation in day-to-day activities are almost 51 times more likely to be economically inactive compared to men with no health condition (ORadj=50.99, 95%CI:46.8,55.6). Learning/mental-health conditions are more likely to be associated with economic inactivity in both women and men compared to physical health conditions, such as long-term pain, mobility or breathing difficulties. Individuals in receipt of DLA are more than twice as likely to be economically inactive as their peers who are not in receipt of DLA. Conclusion Individuals with mental-health conditions reporting a lot of limitation in day-to-day activities have the lowest rates of participation in the labour-market. A lot of limitation in the day-to-day activities appears to be strongly associated with economic inactivity regardless of the health condition. DLA uptake is associated with considerably reduced likelihood of being economically active overall while the health conditions underlying DLA uptake are strong barriers to access the labour-market in NI.
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/1189
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