Pavalko E K, Elder G H, Clipp E C
Department of Sociology, Indiana University, Bloomington 47405.
J Health Soc Behav. 1993 Dec;34(4):363-80.
Recent research on work stress has focused heavily on how the demands and rewards of single jobs influence health or mortality, but has left the implications of broader patterns of worklives largely uninvestigated. Life history data from the Stanford-Terman study is used in this research to explore patterns of career mobility among middle-class men and the implications of these patterns for their longevity. While relatively few men in this study experienced a period in which they moved through a series of unrelated jobs, those who did had a higher mortality risk. Similarly, men who progressed early in their careers but then remained stable in later periods tended to be at a greater risk than those who progressed in both time periods. Health and lifestyle measures were also significant predictors of mortality risk, but did not account for the observed impact of worklife patterns on mortality. We discuss the implications of these findings for understanding the work-health relationship.
近期关于工作压力的研究主要聚焦于单一工作的要求和回报如何影响健康或死亡率,而对更广泛的工作生活模式的影响却 largely 未作研究。本研究使用了斯坦福-特曼研究中的生活史数据,以探讨中产阶级男性的职业流动模式及其对寿命的影响。虽然在这项研究中相对较少的男性经历过从事一系列不相关工作的时期,但经历过的人有更高的死亡风险。同样,那些在职业生涯早期取得进步但后期保持稳定的男性,比在两个时期都取得进步的男性面临更大的风险。健康和生活方式指标也是死亡风险的重要预测因素,但并不能解释观察到的工作生活模式对死亡率的影响。我们讨论了这些发现对于理解工作与健康关系的意义。