Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, 3010, Australia.
Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, 3010, Australia.
Soc Sci Med. 2020 Dec;266:113452. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113452. Epub 2020 Oct 17.
The effects of poor-quality work (high job demands, low job control, job insecurity, and effort-reward imbalance) are harmful to health but it isn't clear whether exposure to these psychosocial work stressors over time translates into increased risk of mortality.
We investigated the effect of time-varying psychosocial work stressors on mortality using data from a longitudinal cohort of working Australians by examining association between job control, job demands, job insecurity, unfair pay overtime and all-cause mortality. We examined whether gender modified these relationships.
Over 20,000 participants from the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey with self-reported repeated exposure measures were followed for 15 years. Survival analysis models with baseline hazard specified by the Weibull distribution were used to examine the association between psychosocial work stressors over time and mortality.
Low job control (HR=1.39; 95% CI: 1.06-1.83) and job insecurity (1.36; 1.06-1.74) were associated with increased risk of mortality. High job demands (1.01; 0.75-1.34) and effort-reward unfairness (1.20; 0.90-1.59) were not associated with mortality. The effect of job insecurity was attenuated (1.20; 0.93-1.54) after controlling for sociodemographic and health risk factors. Male participants exposed to low job control and job insecurity had an 81% and 39% increase risk of mortality, respectively.
Long-term exposure to low job control and low job security is associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality. Effects were largely restricted to males and persisted after adjustments for sociodemographic and health characteristics. The lack of effects observed for females may have been due to the small number of deaths in females. Awareness of implications of the adverse effects of psychosocial work stressors on health and mortality in workplaces, and interventions to improve job control and job security could contribute to better health and wellbeing, reducing the effect of psychosocial work stressors on mortality.
工作质量差(高工作要求、低工作控制、工作不安全和努力-回报失衡)对健康有害,但目前尚不清楚随着时间的推移,这些心理社会工作压力源的暴露是否会增加死亡率。
我们通过观察工作控制、工作需求、工作不安全、不公平的加班报酬与全因死亡率之间的关系,使用来自澳大利亚纵向工作队列的纵向队列数据,研究随时间变化的心理社会工作压力源对死亡率的影响。我们还研究了性别是否会改变这些关系。
超过 20,000 名来自澳大利亚家庭收入和劳动力动态调查的参与者,他们的自我报告重复暴露测量结果被随访了 15 年。使用基于 Weibull 分布的基线危险指定的生存分析模型,研究随时间变化的心理社会工作压力源与死亡率之间的关系。
低工作控制(HR=1.39;95%CI:1.06-1.83)和工作不安全(1.36;1.06-1.74)与死亡率增加相关。高工作需求(1.01;0.75-1.34)和努力-回报不公平(1.20;0.90-1.59)与死亡率无关。在控制社会人口统计学和健康风险因素后,工作不安全的影响减弱(1.20;0.93-1.54)。暴露于低工作控制和工作不安全的男性参与者的死亡率分别增加了 81%和 39%。
长期暴露于低工作控制和低工作安全与全因死亡率增加相关。这些影响主要局限于男性,并且在调整社会人口统计学和健康特征后仍然存在。在女性中观察到的影响较小可能是由于女性死亡人数较少。认识到心理社会工作压力源对健康和死亡率的不利影响在工作场所的意义,以及改善工作控制和工作安全的干预措施,可以促进更好的健康和幸福感,从而降低心理社会工作压力源对死亡率的影响。