Kim Myoung-Hee, Kim Chang-Yup, Park Jin-Kyung, Kawachi Ichiro
Department of Preventive Medicine, Eulji University School of Medicine, Daejeon, Republic of Korea.
Soc Sci Med. 2008 Dec;67(12):1982-94. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.09.051. Epub 2008 Oct 23.
We aimed to evaluate the health effects of precarious employment based on a counterfactual framework, using the Korea Labor and Income Panel Survey data. At the 4th wave (2001), information was obtained on 1991 male and 1378 female waged workers. Precarious work was defined on the basis of workers employed on a temporary or daily basis, part-time, or in a contingent (fixed short-term) job. The outcome was self-rated health with five response categories. Confounding factors included age, marital status, education, industry and occupation of current employment, household income, residential area, and prior health status. Propensity scores for each individual to be a precarious worker were calculated from logistic models including those covariates, and based on them, precarious workers were matched to non-precarious workers. Then, we examined the effects of precarious employment on health and explored the potential intermediary variables, using ordered logistic Generalized Estimating Equations models. All analyses were performed separately by gender. Precarious workers were found to be in a lower socioeconomic position and to have worse health status. Univariate matched analyses showed that precarious employment was associated with worse health in both men and women. By further controlling for socio-demographic covariates, the odds ratios were attenuated but remained significant. Job satisfaction, especially as related to job insecurity, and monthly wage further attenuated the effects. This suggests that to improve health status of precarious workers in Korea, policy strategies need to tackle the channeling of the socially disadvantaged into precarious jobs. Also, regulations to eliminate discrimination against precarious workers in working conditions or material reward should be introduced and enforced. There is no doubt that job insecurity, which is pervasive among workers in Korea, should be minimized by suspending market-oriented labor policies which rely on quantitative flexibility.
我们旨在基于反事实框架,利用韩国劳动与收入面板调查数据评估不稳定就业对健康的影响。在第4轮调查(2001年)中,获取了1991名男性和1378名女性受薪工人的信息。不稳定工作是根据临时工、日工、兼职或临时(固定短期)工作来定义的。结果是自我评定的健康状况,有五个回答类别。混杂因素包括年龄、婚姻状况、教育程度、当前就业的行业和职业、家庭收入、居住地区以及先前的健康状况。根据包含这些协变量的逻辑模型计算出每个人成为不稳定工人的倾向得分,并在此基础上,将不稳定工人与非不稳定工人进行匹配。然后,我们使用有序逻辑广义估计方程模型研究不稳定就业对健康的影响,并探索潜在的中介变量。所有分析均按性别分别进行。发现不稳定工人处于较低的社会经济地位,健康状况较差。单变量匹配分析表明,不稳定就业与男性和女性的较差健康状况相关。通过进一步控制社会人口统计学协变量,优势比有所降低,但仍然显著。工作满意度,尤其是与工作不安全感相关的满意度,以及月工资进一步减弱了这种影响。这表明,为改善韩国不稳定工人的健康状况,政策策略需要解决将社会弱势群体引导至不稳定工作岗位的问题。此外,应出台并执行消除在工作条件或物质奖励方面对不稳定工人歧视的规定。毫无疑问,韩国工人中普遍存在的工作不安全感应通过暂停依赖数量灵活性的市场导向型劳动政策来降至最低。