| Literature DB >> 26232123 |
Töres Theorell1,2, Anne Hammarström3, Gunnar Aronsson4, Lil Träskman Bendz5, Tom Grape6, Christer Hogstedt7, Ina Marteinsdottir8, Ingmar Skoog9, Charlotte Hall10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Depressive symptoms are potential outcomes of poorly functioning work environments. Such symptoms are frequent and cause considerable suffering for the employees as well as financial loss for the employers. Accordingly good prospective studies of psychosocial working conditions and depressive symptoms are valuable. Scientific reviews of such studies have pointed at methodological difficulties but still established a few job risk factors. Those reviews were published some years ago. There is need for an updated systematic review using the GRADE system. In addition, gender related questions have been insufficiently reviewed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26232123 PMCID: PMC4522058 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1954-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flow chart of the literature search, screening, review- and quality assessment
A summary of the scientific evidence for variables with sufficient data to draw a conclusion on the association between work environment factors and future depressive symptoms
| Work-related factor | Participants | Studies | Scientific evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Control | 158 251 | 19 |
|
|
| |||
| Demands - psychological job demands | 53 985 | 10 |
|
| Job strain | 197 682 | 14 |
|
| Passive job (low decision latitude, low job demands) | 11 419 | 2 |
|
| High pressure job | 34 554 | 5 |
|
| Effort reward imbalance | 27 136 | 3 |
|
| Low support at the work place | 82 772 | 17 |
|
| - Low supervisor support | 50 935 | 8 |
|
| - Low co-worker support | 27 170 | 6 |
|
| Poor social climate at the work place | 9 242 | 2 |
|
| Poor social capital at the work place | 59 340 | 2 |
|
| Low work place justice | 33 589 | 5 |
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| - Procedural injustice | 33 589 | 5 |
|
| - Relational injustice | 30 761 | 3 |
|
| Work place conflicts | 13 732 | 3 |
|
| - Conflicts with superiors | 9 692 | 2 |
|
| - Conflicts with co-workers | 9 692 | 2 |
|
| Bullying | 15 173 | 3 |
|
| Low job development | 15 173 | 4 |
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| Job insecurity | 24 833 | 7 |
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| Long working week | 13 107 | 6 |
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| Demands (several types of demands), Demands (emotional), Distributive justice, Threats, Violence, Irregular, Irregular work hours, Physically demanding work, Pesticides, Solvents, Heavy metals | |||
- There is scientific evidence for an association between exposure and outcome. The result is based on studies of high or moderate quality. The quality of evidence has been upgraded due to consistency of the data (control and job strain) or large magnitude of effect (bullying)
- There is scientific evidence for an association between exposure and outcome. The result is based on studies of high or moderate quality
- It is not possible to determine if there is any association between exposure and outcome. The motivation is that one or several conditions apply: 1) no study fulfilled the inclusion criteria, 2) none of the studies fulfilling the inclusion criteria were relevant to the hypothesis tested in the present review, 3) all relevant studies were of low quality or 4) studies were of high or moderate quality - but one or several limitations applied, e.g. inconsistency of data between studies
Fig. 2Association between work environment factors and development of depressive symptoms when evidence was judged as moderate (grade 3), a. Decision latitude, The graph is based on data from the least adjusted model in studies expressing the strength of the association either as odds ratios or as correlations (the latter have been transformed into odds ratios). Ylipaavalniemi et al.: “Healthy at baseline” refers to a doctor diagnosis/non-diagnosis of depression. Please note that data from six more studies (Dagher et al. 2011, Magnusson Hansson et al. 2009, Paterniti et al. 2002, Plaisier et al. 2007, Rugulies et al. 2006 and Wieclaw et al. 2008) are included in the evidence-rated result; however data from these studies could not be illustrated in the graph due to the data format. Data have been re-calculated to show the association between high level of control and development of depressive symptoms (data in these studies are presented as association between low level of control and depressive symptoms). b. Job strain, The graph is based on data from the least adjusted model in studies expressing the strength of the association either as odds ratios or as correlations (the latter have been transformed into odds ratios). Please note that data from three more studies (Ibrahim et al. 2009, Wieclaw et al. 2008 and Mantyniemi et al. 2012) are included in the evidence-rated result; however data from these studies could not be illustrated in the graph due to the data format. c. Bullying, The graph is based on data from the least adjusted model in studies expressing the strength of the association either as odds ratios or as correlations (the latter have been transformed into odds ratios)