| Literature DB >> 27104548 |
Abstract
Mainstream psychological stress theory claims that it is important to include information on people's ways of coping with work stress when assessing the impact of stressful psychosocial work environments on health. Yet, some widely used respective theoretical models focus exclusively on extrinsic factors. The model of effort-reward imbalance (ERI) differs from them as it explicitly combines information on extrinsic and intrinsic factors in studying workers' health. As a growing number of studies used the ERI model in recent past, we conducted a systematic review of available evidence, with a special focus on the distinct contribution of its intrinsic component, the coping pattern "over-commitment", towards explaining health. Moreover, we explore whether the interaction of intrinsic and extrinsic components exceeds the size of effects on health attributable to single components. Results based on 51 reports document an independent explanatory role of "over-commitment" in explaining workers' health in a majority of studies. However, support in favour of the interaction hypothesis is limited and requires further exploration. In conclusion, the findings of this review support the usefulness of a work stress model that combines extrinsic and intrinsic components in terms of scientific explanation and of designing more comprehensive worksite stress prevention programs.Entities:
Keywords: effort-reward imbalance; health measures; over-commitment; systematic review; work stress models
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27104548 PMCID: PMC4847094 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph13040432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flowchart of included and excluded articles.
Summary of effects of over-commitment on health.
| Authors [Reference] | Study Design | Sample | Health Outcomes | OC Hypothesis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diseases or risk factors | ||||
| Gilbert-Ouimet | P | 1595 Canadian white-collar workers | Blood pressure | ↑ |
| Sembajwe | P | 14,641 French company employees | Fatigue | ↑ |
| Ota | P | 1022 Japanese workers | Insomnia | ↑ |
| Joksimovic | P | 106 German workers with coronary artery disease | Coronary restenosis | ↑ |
| Ota | P | 579 Japanese workers | Smoking cessation | - |
| Rothenbacher | CS | 189 German company employees | Dyspepsia | ↑ |
| Irie | CS | 441 Japanese workers | Plasma glucose | ↑ |
| Xu | CS | 732 Chinese workers | Plasma fibrinogen | ↑ |
| Xu | CS | 544 Chinese workers | Dyslipidemia | ↑ |
| Xu | CS | 320 Chinese workers | Coronary stenosis | ↑ |
| Xu | CS | 734 Chinese workers | Carotid intima-media thickness | ↑ |
| Lehr | CC | 244 German teachers | Depression | - |
| Psychobiological markers | ||||
| Steptoe | CS | 197 British white-collar employees | Ambulatory blood pressure, and salivary cortisol | ↑ (ambulatory blood pressure, salivary cortisol) |
| Vrijkotte | CS | 109 Dutch white-collar workers | Ambulatory heart rate | - |
| Vrijkotte | CS | 67 Dutch white-collar workers | Ambulatory cardiac sympathetic activity | ↑ |
| Garza | CS | 91 Dutch office workers | Heart rate variability | ↓ |
| Vrijkotte | CS | 124 Dutch white-collar workers | Plasma fibrinolysis | ↓ |
| von Känel | E | 52 German teachers | Plasma coagulation | ↓ |
| Xu | CS | 731 Chinese workers | C-reactive protein | ↑ |
| Bellingrath | E | 55 German teachers | Natural killer cells and T-helper cells | ↓ (natural killer cells and T-helper cells) |
| Nakata | CS | 347 Japanese white-collar employee | Natural killer cells | - |
| Marchand | CS | 401 Canadian workers | Salivary cortisol | ↑ (awakening) ↓ (afternoon and bedtime) |
| Wirtz | E | 200 German employees | Plasma cortisol | ↑ |
| Eller | CS | 83 Danish workers | Salivary cortisol | ↑ |
| Bellingrath | E | 53 German teachers | Plasma adrenocorticotropin, plasma and salivary cortisol | ↓ (plasma adrenocorticotropin, plasma and salivary cortisol) |
| Maina | CS | 104 Italian workers | Salivary cortisol | - |
| Ota | CS | 115 Japanese teachers | Salivary cortisol, and dehydroepi-androsterone | - |
P: prospective study; CS: cross-sectional study; CC: case-control study; E: experimental study; ↑: significant and positive association; ↓: significant and negative association; -: non-significant or null association.
Summary of moderating effects of over-commitment on associations between effort-reward imbalance and health.
| Authors [Reference] | Study Design | Sample | Health Outcomes | Interaction Hypothesis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test of interaction term (ERI × OC) | ||||
| Gilbert-Ouimet | P | 1595 Canadian white-collar workers | Blood pressure | - |
| von Känel | E | 52 German teachers | Plasma coagulation | - |
| Marchand | CS | 401 Canadian workers | Salivary cortisol | - |
| Bathman | CS | 66 Australian dairy farmers | Salivary immunoglobulin A | - |
| Oren | CS | 159 Israeli employees | Burnout | - |
| Yu | CS | 878 Chinese factory workers | Psychosomatic complaints, and depressive symptoms | - |
| van Vegchel | CS | 167 Dutch healthcare workers | psychosomatic and physical health symptoms | - |
| Preckel | CS | 1587 German industrial workers | Exhaustion, depression, and sleep | - |
| Allisey | CS | 897 Australian police officers | Psychological distress | - |
| Derycke | P | 1531 Belgian healthcare workers | Turnover intention | - |
| Willis | CS | 112 British police employees | Work-family conflict and burnout | - |
| Tse | CS | 186 British bus drivers | Psychological and physical ill health | - |
| Aboa-Éboulé | P | 738 Canadian post-myocardial infarction workers | Recurrent coronary events | - |
| Wahrendorf | P | 6053 French company employees | Physical health functioning | + |
| Xu | CS | 734 Chinese workers | Hypertension | + |
| Xu | CC | 388 Chinese workers | Coronary heart disease | + |
| Li | CS | 2738 German industrial workers | Mental health functioning | + |
| Feuerhahn | CS | 152 German company employees | Emotional exhaustion and job performance | + |
| Bakker | CS | 204 German nurses | Burnout | + |
| Jolivet | CS | 3316 French nurses | depressive symptoms | + |
| Kinman | CS | 844 British academic employees | Job satisfaction and turnover intention | + |
| Test of combined variable of ERI and OC | ||||
| Buddeberg-Fischer | P | 433 Swiss physicians | Anxiety and depression | + |
| Pélissier | CS | 2471 French nursing home staff | Mental well-being | + |
| Yu | CS | 5338 Chinese workers | Depressive symptoms | + |
| Lau [ | CS | 1803 Norwegian employees | Self-rated health, and burnout | + |
| Feldt | P | 298 Finnish managers | Burnout, and recovery experiences | + |
| Weyers | CS | 367 Danish nurses | Health functioning, and somatic symptoms | + |
P: prospective study; CS: cross-sectional study; CC: case-control study; E: experimental study; +: significant interaction; –: non-significant interaction.