NEWS
96%
of Working Age People report Health Risk Factors
April
2010 Australia
| Nearly all working age people reported at least one health risk
factor, and three quarters reported multiple health risk factors,
according to a report released today by the Australian Institute
of Health and Welfare (AIHW).
The report,
Risk factors and participation in work, looked at the work patterns
of people who reported health risk factors, and compared them
with the work patterns of those who did not report health risk
factors.
These risk
factors include, smoking, risky alcohol consumption, physical
inactivity and low fruit and vegetable consumption.
Karen Bishop
of the Institute’s Population Health Unit said, ‘The
report found that the odds of not being in the labour force were
greater for those with health risk factors than for those without,
but only marginally.
‘However,
men and women with three or more risk factors had significantly
greater odds of not being in the workforce,’ she said.
For men with
three or more risk factors, the odds of being out of the labour
force were twice as high as for men without health risk factors.
For women with three or more risk factors, the odds were almost
twice as high.
Rates of
absenteeism were significantly higher for men and women who reported
at least one health risk factor and at least one chronic disease.
Rates of
absenteeism for this group were four times as high for men, and
more than twice as high for women, than their counterparts who
did not report any health risk factors or chronic disease.
The
health risk factors assessed in this report are widely known to
contribute to the development of chronic conditions such as heart
diseases, lung diseases and diabetes.