Literature DB >> 19155280

Socioeconomic position, psychosocial work environment and cerebrovascular disease among women: the Finnish public sector study.

Mika Kivimäki1, David Gimeno, Jane E Ferrie, G David Batty, Tuula Oksanen, Markus Jokela, Marianna Virtanen, Paula Salo, Tasnime N Akbaraly, Marko Elovainio, Jaana Pentti, Jussi Vahtera.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The excess risk of fatal and non-fatal cerebrovascular disease in people from low socioeconomic positions is only partially explained by conventional cerebrovascular risk factors. This has led to the suggestion that poor psychosocial work environments provide important additional explanatory power. However, little evidence is available for women.
METHODS: We examined whether job demands or job control contributed to the socioeconomic gradient in cerebrovascular disease among 48 361 women aged 18-65 years. Job demands, job control and behavioural risk factors were self-reported in 2000-2002; socioeconomic position (as indexed by occupational class) and all of the health measures were obtained from registers. The outcome was recorded hospitalization or death from cerebrovascular disease.
RESULTS: During a mean follow-up of 3.4 years, 124 women had a new cerebrovascular disease event. The risk was 2.3 (95% CI 1.3-3.9) times higher among women in low vs high socioeconomic positions. Adjustment for conventional risk factors, such as prevalent hypertension, coronary heart disease, diabetes, smoking, heavy alcohol consumption, physical inactivity and obesity, attenuated this excess risk by 23%. In contrast, adjustment for job demands and job control actually amplified the gradient by 36% suggesting a suppression effect.
CONCLUSIONS: In this contemporary cohort of employed women, job demands-alone and in combination with job control-suppressed rather than explained socioeconomic differences in cerebrovascular disease.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19155280      PMCID: PMC3159152          DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyn373

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0300-5771            Impact factor:   7.196


  27 in total

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4.  Psychological stress and cardiovascular disease: empirical demonstration of bias in a prospective observational study of Scottish men.

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6.  Educational level and stroke mortality: a comparison of 10 European populations during the 1990s.

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  18 in total

1.  Squeezing blood from a stone: how income inequality affects the health of the American workforce.

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Review 5.  Relationship between alcohol-attributable disease and socioeconomic status, and the role of alcohol consumption in this relationship: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

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6.  Social Determinants of Stroke as Related to Stress at Work among Working Women: A Literature Review.

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Review 7.  Work Stress as a Risk Factor for Cardiovascular Disease.

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8.  A longitudinal general population-based study of job strain and risk for coronary heart disease and stroke in Swedish men.

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