| Literature DB >> 21645393 |
Nancy Beauregard1, Alain Marchand, Marie-Eve Blanc.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the past years, cumulative evidence has convincingly demonstrated that the work environment is a critical determinant of workers' mental health. Nevertheless, much less attention has been dedicated towards understanding the pathways through which other pivotal life environments might also concomitantly intervene, along with the work environment, to bring about mental health outcomes in the workforce. The aim of this study consisted in conducting a systematic review examining the relative contribution of non-work determinants to the prediction of workers' mental health in order to bridge that gap in knowledge.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21645393 PMCID: PMC3141446 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Flow diagram of cross-sectional identification and retrieval of examined studies.
Description of included longitudinal cohort and case-control studies
| References | Sample | Mental health | Follow-up (years) | Non-work factors | Adjustments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barnett and Brennan | Full-time | Psychological | 2 | Age, gender as a stratification variable, education, negative affectivity, partners' psychosocial work environment, mental health at baseline, skill discretion, decision authority, schedule control, job demands, pay adequacy, job security, social support, work hours. | |
| Bromet | Married male | Depression | 1 | Age, history of affective disorders, levels of psychological distress at baseline, alcohol-related problems, decision latitude, job demands, social support at work. | |
| Fuhrer | Civil servants | Psychological | Up to 4 | Age, gender as a stratification variable, employment grade, mental health at baseline, social support at work. | |
| Griffin | Civil servants | Depression | 5 | Depression | Age, gender as a stratification variable, employment grade, decision latitude. |
| Marchand | Representative | Psychological | 7 | Age, gender, self-esteem, locus of control, sense of cohesion, chronic health problems, alcohol consumption, smoking, physical activity, stressful childhood events, mental health at baseline, skill utilization, decision authority, job demands, physical demands, social support at work, job insecurity, work hours, work schedule. | |
| Niedhammer et al. (1998)[ | Workers from | Depressive | 1 | Age, gender as a stratification variable, education, occupational status, stressful occupational events, previous absenteeism for mental health, decision latitude, job demands, social support at work. | |
| Revicki | Emergency | Depression | 1 | Age, gender, mental health at baseline, Work-Related Stress Inventory, task-role clarity, social support at work. | |
| Shields | Workers aged 25- | Major depressive | 2 | Age, gender as a stratification variable, education, self-employment status, rotating shift, work hours, job strain. | |
| Shields (2002) [ | Workers aged 18- | Psychological | Up to 4 | Age, gender as a stratification variable, education, mastery, personal stress, smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity, body mass index, mental health at baseline, self-employment status, week-end shifts, job strain, social support at work, physical demands, job insecurity, rotating shift, work hours. | |
| Smith | Workers aged 25- | Psychological | 4 | Age, gender, education, personal stress, self-rated health, body mass index, hypertension, heart disease, back pain, mental health at baseline, decision latitude. | |
| Stansfeld | Civil servants | Mental health | Up to 8 | Age, gender as a stratification variable, employment grade, negative affectivity, mental and physical health at baseline, decision latitude, job demands, social support at work, effort-reward imbalance. | |
| Wickrama | Working parents | Depression | 10 | Gender as a stratification variable, education, mental health at baseline, decision latitude. | |
| Ostry | Male sawmill | Neurotic disorder diagnosis (ICD9) | 5 | Duration of job, ethnicity, occupational status, job demands. | |
Note. OR: odds ratios; b: unstandardized betas; B: standardized betas; ns = non-significant association at p < 0.05.
Critical appraisal of the longitudinal cohort and case-control studies included for analysis
| References | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barnett and Brennan (1998)[ | ** | *** | ** | ** | ** | 5;6 |
| Bromet et al. (1988)[ | ** | ** | ** | ** | *** | 4;7 |
| Fuhrer et al. (1999)[ | *** | *** | * | ** | * | 6;4 |
| Griffin et al. (2002)[ | ** | ** | ** | ** | * | 4;5 |
| Marchand et al. (2005)[ | *** | *** | *** | ** | ** | 6;7 |
| Niedhammer et al. (1998)[ | ** | ** | * | ** | * | 4;4 |
| Revicki et al. (1993)[ | * | * | * | ** | * | 2;4 |
| Shields (1999)[ | ** | ** | *** | ** | ** | 4;7 |
| Shields (2002) [ | ** | *** | ** | ** | ** | 5;6 |
| Smith et al. (2008)[ | *** | ** | ** | ** | ** | 5;6 |
| Stansfeld et al. (1998)[ | *** | *** | * | ** | ** | 6;5 |
| Wickrama et al. (2007)[ | ** | * | * | * | ** | 3;4 |
| Ostry | * | * | ** | ** | ** | 2;6 |
Note. Full details on the scoring system are presented in Additional file 2.
a Criterion considered for the conceptual assessment of the study quality.
b Criterion considered for the methodological assessment of the study quality.
c Total scores were obtained by summing the number of stars allocated to the conceptual and methodological components of the critical appraisal respectively.
Summary of the strength of the evidence for non-work factors having an effect on workers' mental health
| Analytical levels and indicators | Methodological quality | Consistency of | Nature of the | Strength of |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:1/5 = 20% positive | Years in couple = + | Insufficient |
| NOS < 6:[ | NOS < 6:1/4 = 25% positive | Marital status = + + | ||
| Subjective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:1/4 = 25% positive | Marital role quality = + | Insufficient |
| NOS < 6:[ | NOS < 6:2/2 = 100% positive | Social support = +, + + | ||
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:0/4 = 0% positive | Children at home = . | Insufficient |
| NOS < 6:[ | NOS < 6:0/1 = 0% positive | Children at home = . | ||
| Subjective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:1/1 = 100% positive | Children strains = + | Insufficient |
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:0/5 = 0% positive | Family SES = -, -- | Insufficient |
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:0/1 = 0% positive | Nb. chronic stressors = . | Insufficient |
| NOS < 6: [ | NOS < 6:2/2 = 100% positive | Nb. life events = +, + + | ||
| Subjective pathway | NOS < 6:[ | NOS < 6:1/1 = 100% positive | Home control = + + | Insufficient |
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS < 6:[ | NOS < 6:1/1 = 100% positive | Caregiving status = + | Insufficient |
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS < 6:[ | NOS < 6:1/2 = 50% positive | Network structure = + | Insufficient |
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:0/1 = 0% positive | Nb. chronic stressors = . | Insufficient |
| NOS < 6: [ | NOS < 6:2/2 = 100% positive | Nb. life events = +, + + | ||
| Subjective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:1/2 = 50% positive | Social support = + + | Moderate |
| NOS < 6:[ | NOS < 6:2/2 = 100% positive | Social support = +, + + | ||
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:1/4 = 25% positive | Occupational structure = + | Insufficient |
| NOS < 6:[ | NOS < 6:1/2 = 50% positive | Community structure = + | ||
| | ||||
| Objective pathway | NOS≥6:[ | NOS≥6:0/1 = 0% positive | Nb. chronic stressors = . | Insufficient |
a A positive finding was considered if reported associations were significant at p < 0.05 and in the anticipated direction for exposure-outcome association.
b: non-significant association at p < 0.05; -: inverse association between non-work factors and mental health of modest magnitude (b, 2 > OR > 0.75); - -: inverse association between non-work factors and mental health of strong magnitude (OR 0.75≥ or ≥2); +: positive association of modest magnitude (b, 2 > OR > 0.75); + + : positive association between non-work factors and mental health of strong magnitude (OR 0.75≥ or ≥2).