Kivimäki Mika, Vahtera Jussi, Elovainio Marko, Virtanen Marianna, Siegrist Johannes
International Institute for Health and Society, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, UK.
Occup Environ Med. 2007 Oct;64(10):659-65. doi: 10.1136/oem.2006.031310. Epub 2007 Jan 25.
Effort-reward imbalance at work is an established psychosocial risk factor but there are also newer conceptualisations, such as procedural injustice (decisions at work lack consistency, openness and input from all affected parties) and relational injustice (problems in considerate and fair treatment of employees by supervisors). The authors examined whether procedural injustice and relational injustice are associated with employee health in addition to, and in combination with, effort-reward imbalance.
Prospective survey data from two cohorts related to public-sector employees: the 10-Town study (n = 18 066 (78% women, age range 19-62) and the Finnish Hospital Personnel study (n = 4833, 89% women, age range 20-60). Self-rated poor health, minor psychiatric morbidity and doctor-diagnosed depression were assessed at baseline (2000-2) and at follow-up (2004). To determine incident morbidity, baseline cases were excluded.
In multivariate models including age, sex, occupational status and all three psychosocial factors as predictors, high effort-reward imbalance and either high procedural injustice or high relational injustice were associated with increased morbidity at follow-up in both cohorts. After combining procedural and relational injustice into a single measure of organisational injustice, high effort-reward imbalance and high injustice were both independently associated with health. For all outcome measures, a combination of high effort-reward imbalance and high organisational injustice was related to a greater health risk than high effort-reward imbalance or injustice alone.
Evidence from two independent occupational cohorts suggests that procedural and relational components of injustice, as a combined index, and effort-reward imbalance are complementary risk factors.
工作中的努力-回报失衡是一种既定的社会心理风险因素,但也有一些新的概念,如程序不公正(工作决策缺乏一致性、透明度以及所有受影响方的参与)和关系不公正(上级对员工缺乏体贴和公平的待遇问题)。作者研究了程序不公正和关系不公正除了与努力-回报失衡相关外,是否还与员工健康相关,以及它们之间的组合关系。
来自两个与公共部门员工相关队列的前瞻性调查数据:十镇研究(n = 18066,78%为女性,年龄范围19 - 62岁)和芬兰医院工作人员研究(n = 4833,89%为女性,年龄范围20 - 60岁)。在基线(2000 - 2002年)和随访(2004年)时评估自我评定的健康状况不佳、轻度精神疾病发病率以及医生诊断的抑郁症。为确定发病情况,排除基线病例。
在多变量模型中,将年龄、性别、职业地位和所有三个社会心理因素作为预测变量,高努力-回报失衡以及高程序不公正或高关系不公正与两个队列随访时发病率增加相关。将程序不公正和关系不公正合并为组织不公正的单一指标后,高努力-回报失衡和高不公正均与健康独立相关。对于所有结局指标,高努力-回报失衡和高组织不公正的组合比单独的高努力-回报失衡或不公正与更大的健康风险相关。
来自两个独立职业队列的证据表明,不公正的程序和关系成分作为一个综合指标,与努力-回报失衡是互补的风险因素。