Linn M W, Sandifer R, Stein S
Am J Public Health. 1985 May;75(5):502-6. doi: 10.2105/ajph.75.5.502.
From a prospective study of the impact of stress on health in 300 men assessed every six months, men who became unemployed after entering the study were compared with an equal number, matched for age and race, who continued to work. Psychological and health data after unemployment were compared between the two groups by multivariate analysis of variance and covariance. After unemployment, symptoms of somatization, depression, and anxiety were significantly greater in the unemployed than employed. Large standard deviations on self-esteem scores in the unemployed group suggested that some men coped better than others with job-loss stress. Further analysis showed those with higher esteem had more support from family and friends than did those with low self-esteem. Furthermore, unemployed men made significantly more visits to their physicians, took more medications, and spent more days in bed sick than did employed individuals even though the number of diagnoses in the two groups were similar.
通过一项对300名男性进行的前瞻性研究,每六个月对他们的压力对健康的影响进行评估,将进入研究后失业的男性与同等数量、年龄和种族匹配且仍在工作的男性进行比较。通过多变量方差分析和协方差分析,比较两组失业后的心理和健康数据。失业后,失业者的躯体化、抑郁和焦虑症状明显比就业者严重。失业组自尊得分的标准差较大,表明一些男性比其他人更能应对失业压力。进一步分析表明,自尊较高的人比自尊较低的人从家人和朋友那里得到的支持更多。此外,失业男性去看医生的次数明显更多,服用的药物更多,因病卧床的天数也比就业者更多,尽管两组的诊断数量相似。