Fujishiro K, Lawson C C, Hibert E L, Chavarro J E, Rich-Edwards J W
Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluation, and Field Studies, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Department of Medicine, Channing Division of Network Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2015 Sep;39(9):1395-400. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2015.91. Epub 2015 May 19.
The relationship between job strain and weight gain has been unclear, especially for women. Using data from over 52,000 working women, we compare the association between change in job strain and change in body mass index (BMI) across different levels of baseline BMI.
SUBJECTS/METHODS: We used data from participants in the Nurses' Health Study II (n=52,656, mean age=38.4 years), an ongoing prospective cohort study. Using linear regression, we modeled the change in BMI over 4 years as a function of the change in job strain, baseline BMI and the interaction between the two. Change in job strain was characterized in four categories combining baseline and follow-up levels as follows: consistently low strain (low at both points), decreased strain (high strain at baseline only), increased strain (high strain at follow-up only) and consistently high strain (high at both points). Age, race/ethnicity, pregnancy history, job types and health behaviors at baseline were controlled for in the model.
In adjusted models, women who reported high job strain at least once during the 4-year period had a greater increase in BMI (ΔBMI=0.06-0.12, P<0.05) compared with those who never reported high job strain. The association between the change in job strain exposure and the change in BMI depended on the baseline BMI level (P=0.015 for the interaction): the greater the baseline BMI, the greater the BMI gain associated with consistently high job strain. The BMI gain associated with increased or decreased job strain was uniform across the range of baseline BMI.
Women with higher BMI may be more vulnerable to BMI gain when exposed to constant work stress. Future research focusing on mediating mechanisms between job strain and BMI change should explore the possibility of differential responses to job strain by initial BMI.
工作压力与体重增加之间的关系尚不清楚,尤其是对女性而言。我们利用来自52000多名职业女性的数据,比较了不同基线体重指数(BMI)水平下工作压力变化与BMI变化之间的关联。
受试者/方法:我们使用了护士健康研究II(n = 52656,平均年龄 = 38.4岁)参与者的数据,这是一项正在进行的前瞻性队列研究。我们使用线性回归模型,将4年内BMI的变化作为工作压力变化、基线BMI以及二者之间相互作用的函数进行建模。工作压力变化分为四类,结合基线和随访水平如下:持续低压力(两点均为低压力)、压力降低(仅基线时为高压力)、压力增加(仅随访时为高压力)和持续高压力(两点均为高压力)。模型中控制了基线时的年龄、种族/民族、妊娠史、工作类型和健康行为。
在调整后的模型中,与那些在4年期间从未报告过高工作压力的女性相比,那些至少报告过一次高工作压力的女性BMI增加幅度更大(ΔBMI = 0.06 - 0.12,P < 0.05)。工作压力暴露变化与BMI变化之间的关联取决于基线BMI水平(交互作用P = 0.015):基线BMI越高,与持续高工作压力相关的BMI增加幅度越大。与工作压力增加或降低相关的BMI增加在基线BMI范围内是一致的。
BMI较高的女性在面临持续工作压力时,可能更容易出现BMI增加。未来聚焦于工作压力与BMI变化之间中介机制的研究,应探索初始BMI对工作压力不同反应的可能性。