29 research outputs found

    Seeking care (visits per service months) during military service and disability retirement by the service time strata.

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    <p>Seeking care (visits per service months) during military service and disability retirement by the service time strata.</p

    Health Problems during Compulsory Military Service Predict Disability Retirement: A Register-Based Study on Secular Trends during 40 Years of Follow-Up - Fig 2

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    <p><b>Cumulative survival curves for the incidence of a) all-cause disability retirement and b) disability retirement due to mental disorders, for visits due to musculoskeletal and mental problems.</b> HR = hazard ratio, adjusted for year of service.</p

    Cumulative incidence (%) of disability retirement by completeness of military service, in three service time strata.

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    <p>Cumulative incidence (%) of disability retirement by completeness of military service, in three service time strata.</p

    The association of psychosocial exposures measured at individual (ind) level and at group level (job exposure matrix (JEM)) with one-month prevalence of depression and low back pain among men and women.

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    <p>Odds ratios (OR) and their 95% confidence intervals (95% CI).</p><p>H2000 – the Health 2000 Study; FWH- the Finnish Work and Health Surveys;</p>1<p>ORs calculated based on self-reports and adjusted for age and education.</p>2<p>ORs calculated based on JEM and adjusted for age, education and year of survey.</p>3<p>ORs calculated based on JEM adjusted for exposure misclassification bias.</p><p>The association of psychosocial exposures measured at individual (ind) level and at group level (job exposure matrix (JEM)) with one-month prevalence of depression and low back pain among men and women.</p

    Biased odds (OR′) ratios according to sensitivity and specificity of the job exposure matrix when the true odds ratios (OR) were assumed to equal 1.5, 2 or 3.

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    1<p>Prevalence of exposure is assumed to equal 0.50.</p>2<p>Prevalence of exposure is assumed to equal 0.33.</p>3<p>Prevalence of exposure is assumed to equal 0.25.</p><p>*Statistical significance at the 5% level (two-sided test) of the biased odds ratios is calculated for a study population of 5000 men and 5000 women.</p><p>Biased odds (OR′) ratios according to sensitivity and specificity of the job exposure matrix when the true odds ratios (OR) were assumed to equal 1.5, 2 or 3.</p
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