Authors
Desmond Campbell, Michael James Green, Neil Davies, Evangelia Demou, Laura D Howe, Sean Harrison, Daniel J Smith, David M Howard, Andrew M McIntosh, Marcus Munafò, Srinivasa Vittal Katikireddi
Publication date
2022/6/1
Journal
J Epidemiol Community Health
Volume
76
Issue
6
Pages
563-571
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Description
Background
Depression is associated with socioeconomic disadvantage. However, whether and how depression exerts a causal effect on employment remains unclear. We used Mendelian randomisation (MR) to investigate whether depression affects employment and related outcomes in the UK Biobank dataset.
Methods
We selected 227 242 working-age participants (40–64 in men, 40–59 years for women) of white British ethnicity/ancestry with suitable genetic data in the UK Biobank study. We used 30 independent genetic variants associated with depression as instruments. We conducted observational and two-sample MR analyses. Outcomes were employment status (employed vs not, and employed vs sickness/disability, unemployment, retirement or caring for home/family); weekly hours worked (among employed); Townsend Deprivation Index; highest educational attainment; and household income.
Results …
Total citations
20222023202411316
Scholar articles
D Campbell, MJ Green, N Davies, E Demou, LD Howe… - J Epidemiol Community Health, 2022