Job stress, absenteeism and coronary heart disease European cooperative study (the JACE study) - Design of a multicentre prospective study

Citation
I. Houtman et al., Job stress, absenteeism and coronary heart disease European cooperative study (the JACE study) - Design of a multicentre prospective study, EUR J PUB H, 9(1), 1999, pp. 52-57
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science","Envirnomentale Medicine & Public Health
Journal title
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
ISSN journal
11011262 → ACNP
Volume
9
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
52 - 57
Database
ISI
SICI code
1101-1262(199903)9:1<52:JSAACH>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
Background: The motives, objectives and design of a multicentre prospective study on job stress, absenteeism and coronary heart disease in Europe (the JACE study) is presented in this paper. Some specific gaps in the reviewed literature are explicitly tapped into by the JACE study. Its objectives ar e i) to compare the distributions of the Karasek job stress scales for the same broad categories of occupations in different European countries tin ma les and females), ii) to study the predictive power of the job stress scale s and the job strain model for one year of sickness absence tin males and. females) and iii) to study the predictive power of the job stress scales an d the job strain model for a three year incidence of coronary heart disease tin males only). Methods: In answering these questions, relations are stud ied controlling for gender, age, level of education, company size, physical work risks and shift work, as well as traditional risk factors for CHD (i, e serum cholesterol, serum HDL cholesterol, smoking habits and blood pressu re). The JACE study is a Biomed 1 concerted action, The JACE group:consists of eight participating centres from six countries, i,e, from Belgium and S weden (two centres), France, Italy, Spain, Sweden and The Netherlands teach one centre), The coordination of the group is in Brussels, The participati ng centres brought in over 15,000 European workers to test the hypotheses.