Despite the many investigations of male workers, little is known about
cardiovascular risk attributable to occupational class or occupationa
l exposures among women. Results from a previous investigation suggest
that the relationship between these factors may be different in women
, for whom lack of workplace social support may be important in cardio
vascular morbidity. The finding that women in blue-collar occupations
had over three times the rate of coronary heart disease compared with
their white-collar equivalents is intriguing. Modest and inconclusive
data about the relationship between occupational stress and health sta
tus in women suggest that class and level of control may be of importa
nce in women's experience of occupational stress.