Schrijvers C T, van de Mheen H D, Stronks K, Mackenbach J P
Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Int J Epidemiol. 1998 Dec;27(6):1011-8. doi: 10.1093/ije/27.6.1011.
The aim was to study the impact of different categories of working conditions on the association between occupational class and self-reported health in the working population.
Data were collected through a postal survey conducted in 1991 among inhabitants of 18 municipalities in the southeastern Netherlands. Data concerned 4521 working men and 2411 working women and included current occupational class (seven classes), working conditions (physical working conditions, job control, job demands, social support at work), perceived general health (very good or good versus less than good) and demographic confounders. Data were analysed with logistic regression techniques.
For both men and women we observed a higher odds ratio for a less than good perceived general health in the lower occupational classes (adjusted for confounders). The odds of a less than good perceived general health was larger among people reporting more hazardous physical working conditions, lower job control, lower social support at work and among those in the highest category of job demands. Results were similar for men and women. Men and women in the lower occupational classes reported more hazardous physical working conditions and lower job control as compared to those in higher occupational classes. High job demands were more often reported in the higher occupational classes, while social support at work was not clearly related to occupational class. When physical working conditions and job control were added simultaneously to a model with occupational class and confounders, the odds ratios for occupational classes were reduced substantially. For men, the per cent change in the odds ratios for the occupational classes ranged between 35% and 83%, and for women between 35% and 46%.
A substantial part of the association between occupational class and a less than good perceived general health in the working population could be attributed to a differential distribution of hazardous physical working conditions and a low job control across occupational classes. This suggests that interventions aimed at improving these working conditions might result in a reduction of socioeconomic inequalities in health in the working population.
目的是研究不同类别的工作条件对职业阶层与劳动人口自我报告健康之间关联的影响。
数据通过1991年对荷兰东南部18个市镇居民进行的邮政调查收集。数据涉及4521名在职男性和2411名在职女性,包括当前职业阶层(七个阶层)、工作条件(体力工作条件、工作控制、工作要求、工作中的社会支持)、自我感知的总体健康状况(非常好或好与不太好)以及人口统计学混杂因素。使用逻辑回归技术对数据进行分析。
对于男性和女性,我们都观察到在较低职业阶层中,自我感知总体健康状况不太好的比值比更高(对混杂因素进行了调整)。在报告有更多危险体力工作条件、工作控制较低、工作中的社会支持较低以及处于工作要求最高类别的人群中,自我感知总体健康状况不太好的几率更大。男性和女性的结果相似。与较高职业阶层的男性和女性相比,较低职业阶层的男性和女性报告的体力工作条件更危险,工作控制更低。较高职业阶层更常报告高工作要求,而工作中的社会支持与职业阶层没有明显关联。当将体力工作条件和工作控制同时添加到包含职业阶层和混杂因素的模型中时,职业阶层的比值比大幅降低。对于男性,职业阶层比值比的变化百分比在35%至83%之间,对于女性在35%至46%之间。
职业阶层与劳动人口中自我感知总体健康状况不太好之间的关联很大一部分可归因于危险体力工作条件和低工作控制在不同职业阶层中的差异分布。这表明旨在改善这些工作条件的干预措施可能会减少劳动人口中健康方面的社会经济不平等。