Hämmig Oliver
University of Zurich, Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute (EBPI), Hirschengraben 84, 8001 Zurich, Switzerland.
SSM Popul Health. 2017 Apr 9;3:393-402. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2017.04.002. eCollection 2017 Dec.
This study aims to explore whether and in what way social support from different sources and domains makes an additional or different and independent contribution to various health and work-related outcomes. Cross-sectional data were used from an employee survey among the workforces of four service companies from different industries in Switzerland. The study sample covered 5,877 employees of working age. The lack of social support from a spouse, relatives, friends, direct supervisors, closest colleagues at work and other co-workers in case of problems at work and at home were assessed and studied individually and jointly as risk factors with respect to a total number of eight outcomes. Health-related outcomes covered poor self-rated health, musculoskeletal disorders, stress feelings and burnout symptoms. Work-related outcomes included feeling overwhelmed at work, difficulty with switching off after work, job dissatisfaction and intention to turnover. Social support from multiple sources in contrast to only individual sources in both life domains was found to be more frequent in women than in men and proved to be most protective and beneficial with regard to health and well-being at work. However, after mutual adjustment of all single sources of social support from both domains, a lack of supervisor support turned out to be the only or the strongest of the few remaining support measures and statistically significant risk factors for the studied outcomes throughout and by far. Being unable to count on the support of a direct supervisor in case of problems at work and even at home was shown to involve a substantially increased risk of poor health and work-related outcomes (aOR = up to 3.8). Multiple sources of social support, and particularly supervisor support, seem to be important resources of health and well-being at work and need to be considered as key factors in workplace health promotion.
本研究旨在探讨来自不同来源和领域的社会支持是否以及以何种方式对各种健康和与工作相关的结果做出额外的、不同的或独立的贡献。研究使用了瑞士四家不同行业服务公司员工调查的横断面数据。研究样本涵盖了5877名工作年龄的员工。评估并单独和联合研究了在工作和家庭出现问题时配偶、亲属、朋友、直接上级、工作中最亲密的同事以及其他同事缺乏社会支持的情况,并将其作为与总共八项结果相关的风险因素。与健康相关的结果包括自我健康评价差、肌肉骨骼疾病、压力感和倦怠症状。与工作相关的结果包括工作时感到不堪重负、下班后难以放松、工作不满意和离职意向。与仅来自生活领域中个别来源的社会支持相比,来自多个来源的社会支持在女性中比在男性中更常见,并且在工作中的健康和幸福感方面被证明是最具保护作用和益处的。然而,在对来自两个领域的所有单一社会支持来源进行相互调整后,缺乏上级支持被证明是唯一的或少数剩余支持措施中最强的,并且是整个研究中以及迄今为止所研究结果的具有统计学意义的风险因素。在工作甚至家庭出现问题时无法指望直接上级的支持,被证明会大幅增加健康状况不佳和与工作相关结果的风险(调整后的比值比高达3.8)。多种来源的社会支持,尤其是上级支持,似乎是工作中健康和幸福感的重要资源,需要被视为工作场所健康促进的关键因素。