Ctm. Schrijvers et al., Socioeconomic inequalities in health in the working population: the contribution of working conditions, INT J EPID, 27(6), 1998, pp. 1011-1018
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Envirnomentale Medicine & Public Health","Medical Research General Topics
Background The aim was to study the impact of different categories of worki
ng conditions on the association between occupational class and self-report
ed health in the working population.
Methods Data were collected through a postal survey conducted in 1991 among
inhabitants of 18 municipalities in the southeastern Netherlands. Data con
cerned 4521 working men and 2411 working women and included current occupat
ional class (seven classes), working conditions (physical working condition
s, job control, job demands, social support at work), perceived general hea
lth (very good or good versus less than good) and demographic confounders.
Data were analysed with logistic regression techniques.
Results For both men and women we observed a higher odds ratio for a less t
han good perceived general health in the lower occupational classes (adjust
ed for confounders). The odds of a less than good perceived general health
was larger among people reporting more hazardous physical working condition
s, lower job control, lower social support at work and among those in the h
ighest category of job demands. Results were similar for men and women. Men
and women in the lower occupational classes reported more hazardous physic
al working conditions and lower job control as compared to those in higher
occupational classes. High job demands were more often reported in the high
er occupational classes, while social support at work was not clearly relat
ed to occupational class. When physical working conditions and job control
were added simultaneously to a model with occupational class and confounder
s, the odds ratios for occupational classes were reduced substantially. For
men, the per cent change in the odds ratios for the occupational classes r
anged between 35% and 83%, and for women between 35% and 46%.
Conclusions A substantial part of the association between occupational clas
s and a less than good perceived general health in the working population c
ould be attributed to a differential distribution of hazardous physical wor
king conditions and a low job control across occupational classes. This sug
gests that interventions aimed at improving these working conditions might
result in a reduction of socioeconomic inequalities in health in the workin
g population.