Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Institute of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, Pusan Paik Hospital, Inje University, 75 Bokji-ro, Busanjin-gu, Busan 47392, Korea.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, MA 01854, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Jun 20;19(12):7530. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19127530.
This study investigated the association between emotional demands and depression or anxiety in a wide range of jobs. We used data from the third Korean Working Conditions Survey ( = 50,032) for all occupational classifications, with no limitations placed on job title or employment type. Among the full set of regular paid workers in addition to self-employed, unpaid family workers, and informal employees such as independent contractors, 23,989 respondents worked with "customers, passengers, students, or patients" (i.e., clients). Emotional demands were evaluated using two questions: handling angry clients and needing to hide feelings for work performance. Any depression or anxiety over the last 12 months was taken to indicate poor mental health. Multivariable logistic regression modeling was performed to calculate adjusted ORs with 95% confidence intervals for the influence of emotional demands on mental health, adjusting for demographic factors (age, gender, education, income), occupational psychological demands, decision latitude, social support, weekly work hours and job insecurity. The prevalence of emotional demands was higher in self-employed and informal employees than in regular paid employees. The more frequent the exposure to the two emotional demands combined was, the higher the risk of depression or anxiety. High psychological demands, low social support, and low job security each further increased the risk of poor mental health. Emotional demands turned out to be widespread in the entire economy, were not limited to service or sales occupations, and were more evident in precarious work. The contribution of emotional demands and other preventable job stressors to the burden of depression or anxiety in society may be substantial.
本研究调查了广泛职业领域中情绪需求与抑郁或焦虑之间的关联。我们使用了第三届韩国工作条件调查(涵盖所有职业分类,对职务或就业类型没有任何限制)的数据,包括所有全职受薪工人(除自营职业者、无薪家庭佣工和独立承包商等非正式员工外),其中有 23989 名员工与“客户、乘客、学生或患者”(即客户)打交道。情绪需求通过两个问题来评估:处理愤怒的客户和为了工作表现而需要隐藏自己的感受。过去 12 个月内的任何抑郁或焦虑都被视为心理健康不佳。采用多变量逻辑回归模型,调整了情绪需求对心理健康影响的调整比值比(OR)及其 95%置信区间,调整了人口统计学因素(年龄、性别、教育、收入)、职业心理需求、决策自由度、社会支持、每周工作时间和工作不安全感。自营职业者和非正式员工的情绪需求比全职受薪员工更为普遍。同时面临这两种情绪需求的情况越频繁,患抑郁或焦虑的风险就越高。较高的心理需求、较低的社会支持和较低的工作保障都进一步增加了心理健康不佳的风险。情绪需求在整个经济中普遍存在,不仅限于服务或销售职业,而且在不稳定的工作中更为明显。情绪需求以及其他可预防的工作压力源对社会中抑郁或焦虑负担的贡献可能相当大。