Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK; Institute for Work & Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Institute for Work & Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Lancet. 2023 Oct 14;402(10410):1357-1367. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(23)00871-1.
This paper, the first in a three-part Series on work and health, provides a narrative review of research into work as a social determinant of health over the past 25 years, the key emerging challenges in this field, and the implications of these challenges for future research. By use of a conceptual framework for work as a social determinant of health, we identified six emerging challenges: (1) the influence of technology on the nature of work in high-income countries, culminating in the sudden shift to telework during the COVID-19 pandemic; (2) the intersectionality of work with gender, sexual orientation, age, race, ethnicity, migrant status, and socioeconomic status as codeterminants of health disparities; (3) the arrival in many Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries of large migrant labour workforces, who are often subject to adverse working conditions and social exclusion; (4) the development of precarious employment as a feature of many national labour markets; (5) the phenomenon of working long and irregular hours with potential health consequences; and (6) the looming threat of climate change's effects on work. We conclude that profound changes in the nature and availability of work over the past few decades have led to widespread new psychosocial and physical exposures that are associated with adverse health outcomes and contribute to increasing disparities in health. These new exposures at work will require novel and creative methods of data collection for monitoring of their potential health impacts to protect the workforce, and for new research into better means of occupational health promotion and protection. There is also an urgent need for a better integration of occupational health within public health, medicine, the life sciences, and the social sciences, with the work environment explicitly conceptualised as a major social determinant of health.
这是三篇关于工作与健康的系列文章中的第一篇,本文对过去 25 年来工作作为健康的社会决定因素的研究进行了叙述性回顾,探讨了该领域当前面临的主要挑战,以及这些挑战对未来研究的影响。我们采用工作作为健康的社会决定因素的概念框架,确定了六个新出现的挑战:(1)技术对高收入国家工作性质的影响,最终导致在 COVID-19 大流行期间突然转向远程工作;(2)工作与性别、性取向、年龄、种族、民族、移民身份和社会经济地位相互交织,成为健康差异的决定因素;(3)许多经合组织国家迎来了大量移民劳动力,他们往往面临不利的工作条件和社会排斥;(4)不稳定就业成为许多国家劳动力市场的特征;(5)长时间和不规律工作的现象出现,可能对健康造成影响;(6)气候变化对工作的影响迫在眉睫。我们的结论是,过去几十年工作的性质和可用性发生了深刻变化,导致广泛出现了新的心理社会和生理暴露,这些暴露与不良健康结果有关,并导致健康差距日益扩大。这些新的工作暴露将需要新颖和创造性的方法来收集数据,以监测其对健康的潜在影响,保护劳动力,并开展新的研究,以更好地促进和保护职业健康。还迫切需要将职业健康更好地纳入公共卫生、医学、生命科学和社会科学之中,明确将工作环境作为健康的主要社会决定因素之一。