Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2010 Feb;1186:102-24. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05338.x.
Adults with better jobs enjoy better health: job title was, in fact, the social gradient metric first used to study the relationship between social class and chronic disease etiology, a core finding now replicated in most developed countries. What has been less well proved is whether this correlation is causal, and if so, through what mechanisms. During the past decade, much research has been directed at these issues. Best evidence in 2009 suggests that occupation does affect health. Most recent research on the relationship has been directed at disentangling the pathways through which lower-status work leads to adverse health outcomes. This review focuses on six areas of recent progress: (1) the role of status in a hierarchical occupational system; (2) the roles of psychosocial job stressors; (3) effects of workplace physical and chemical hazard exposures; (4) evidence that work organization matters as a contextual factor; (5) implications for the gradient of new forms of nonstandard or "precarious" employment such as contract and shift work; and (6) emerging evidence that women may be impacted differently by adverse working conditions, and possibly more strongly, than men.
事实上,工作头衔是最早用于研究社会阶层与慢性病病因之间关系的社会梯度指标,这一核心发现现在已在大多数发达国家得到复制。尚未得到充分证明的是这种相关性是否具有因果关系,如果是这样,其机制是什么。在过去的十年中,大量研究都针对这些问题展开。2009 年的最佳证据表明,职业确实会影响健康。最近关于这种关系的研究主要集中在厘清低地位工作导致不良健康结果的途径上。本综述重点介绍了最近六个方面的进展:(1)等级制度中的地位作用;(2)心理社会工作压力源的作用;(3)工作场所物理和化学危害暴露的影响;(4)工作组织作为一个情境因素的重要性证据;(5)新形式的非标准或“不稳定”就业(如合同工和轮班工)梯度的影响;以及(6)越来越多的证据表明,与男性相比,女性可能更容易受到不利工作条件的影响,而且影响可能更强烈。