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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Psychosocial work factors and sickness absence in 31 countries in Europe
Agnès Parent-thirionIsabelle NiedhammerGreet VermeylenHélène Sultan-taïebJean-françois Chastangsubject
MalePoison controlOccupational safety and healthSickness absenceShift work03 medical and health sciencesSocial support0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsEnvironmental healthAbsenteeismHumansMedicine[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and finances030212 general & internal medicineWorkplaceComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSbusiness.industryMental DisordersPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHuman factors and ergonomics[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance030210 environmental & occupational healthOccupational DiseasesEuropeCross-Sectional Studies8. Economic growthAbsenteeismHarassmentPsychosocial workFemaleSelf ReportbusinessPsychosocialStress Psychologicaldescription
International audience; Background: The studies on the associations between psychosocial work factors and sickness absence have rarely included a large number of factors and European data. The objective was to examine the associations between a large set of psychosocial work factors following well-known and emergent concepts and sickness absence in Europe. Methods: The study population consisted of 14 881 male and 14 799 female workers in 31 countries from the 2005 European Working Conditions Survey. Psychosocial work factors included the following: decision latitude, psychological demands, social support, physical violence, sexual harassment, discrimination, bullying, long working hours, shift and night work, job insecurity, job promotion and work-life imbalance. Covariates were as follows: age, occupation, economic activity, employee/self-employed status and physical, chemical, biological and biomechanical exposures. Statistical analysis was performed using multilevel negative binomial hurdle models to study the occurrence and duration of sickness absence. Results: In the models, including all psychosocial work factors together and adjustment for covariates, high psychological demands, discrimination, bullying, low-job promotion and work-life imbalance for both genders and physical violence for women were observed as risk factors of the occurrence of sickness absence. Bullying and shift work increased the duration of absence among women. Bullying had the strongest association with sickness absence. Conclusion: Various psychosocial work factors were found to be associated with sickness absence. A less conservative analysis exploring each factor separately provided a still higher number of risk factors. Preventive measures should take psychosocial work environment more comprehensively into account to reduce sickness absence and improve health at work at European level.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2013-01-01 |