Literature DB >> 16246990

Justice at work and reduced risk of coronary heart disease among employees: the Whitehall II Study.

Mika Kivimäki1, Jane E Ferrie, Eric Brunner, Jenny Head, Martin J Shipley, Jussi Vahtera, Michael G Marmot.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Justice is a fundamental value in human societies, but its effect on health is poorly described. We examined justice at work as a predictor of coronary heart disease (CHD).
METHODS: Prospective occupational cohort study of 6442 male British civil servants aged 35 to 55 years without prevalent CHD at baseline in phase 1 (1985-1988). Baseline screening included measurements of conventional risk factors. Perceived justice at work and other work-related psychosocial factors were determined by means of questionnaire at phases 1 and 2 (1989-1990). Follow-up for CHD death, first nonfatal myocardial infarction, or definite angina occurring from phase 2 through 1999 was based on medical records (mean follow-up, 8.7 years).
RESULTS: Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for age and employment grade showed that employees who experienced a high level of justice at work had a lower risk of incident CHD than employees with a low or an intermediate level of justice (hazard ratio, 0.65; 95% confidence interval, 0.47-0.89). The hazard ratio did not materially change after additional adjustment for baseline cholesterol concentration, body mass index, hypertension, smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical activity. Although other psychosocial models such as job strain and effort-reward imbalance predicted CHD in these data, the level of justice remained an independent predictor of incident CHD after adjustment for these factors.
CONCLUSION: Justice at work may have benefits for heart health among employees.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16246990     DOI: 10.1001/archinte.165.19.2245

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-9926


  50 in total

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2.  Effort-reward imbalance, procedural injustice and relational injustice as psychosocial predictors of health: complementary or redundant models?

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5.  Organizational Justice and Physiological Coronary Heart Disease Risk Factors in Japanese Employees: a Cross-Sectional Study.

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Review 8.  Epidemiological studies of CHD and the evolution of preventive cardiology.

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Review 9.  Job strain and ambulatory blood pressure: a meta-analysis and systematic review.

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10.  Managerial leadership and ischaemic heart disease among employees: the Swedish WOLF study.

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