The impact of stroke on employment income: A cohort study using hospital and income tax data in Ontario, Canada

Author:

Duong Patrick1ORCID,Egan Mary1,Meyer Matthew23,Morrison Tricia1,Sauvé-Schenk Katrine1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Health Sciences, Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada

2. Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada

3. Population Health, London Health Sciences Centre, London, Canada

Abstract

Objective To document the impact of stroke on employment income among people employed at the time of stroke. Design Population-based cohort study. Participants People hospitalized for stroke in Ontario, Canada (2010–2014) and people without stroke matched on demographic characteristics. Main measures Robust Poisson regression to estimate the effects of stroke on the probability of reporting employment income on tax returns over 3 years. Quantile regression difference-in-differences to estimate the changes in annual employment income attributable to stroke. Results Stroke survivors were increasingly less likely to report any employment income poststroke, incidence rate ratios (IRR) 0.87 at 1 year (95% confidence intervals [CI]; 0.85–0.88), 0.82 at 2 years (95% CI; 0.81–0.84) and 0.81 at 3 years (95% CI; 0.79–0.82). IRR for reporting at least 50% of prestroke income levels were 0.76 at 1 year (95% CI; 0.75–0.78), 0.75 at 2 years (95% CI; 0.73–0.77) and 0.73 at 3 years (95% CI; 0.71–0.75). IRR for reporting at least 90% of prestroke income levels were 0.72 at 1 year (95% CI; 0.70–0.74), 0.66 at 2 years (95% CI; 0.64–0.68) and again 0.66 at 3 years (95% CI; 0.64–0.68). Relative changes in annual employment income attributable to stroke varied from a decrease of 13.8% (95% CI; 8.7–18.9) at the 75th income percentile to a decrease of 43.1% (95% CI; 18.7–67.6) at the 25th income percentile. Conclusions It is important for healthcare and service providers to recognize the impact of stroke on return to prestroke levels of employment income. Low-income stroke survivors experience a more drastic loss in employment income and may need additional social support.

Funder

Canadian Foundation for Innovation

Statistics Canada

Institut canadien d'information sur la santé

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Canadian Research Data Centre Network Emerging Scholars Grant 2021

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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