Association of perceived job insecurity with ischemic heart disease and antihypertensive medication in the Danish Work Environment Cohort Study 1990–2010
Autor: | Karin Rossnagel, Eva Backé, Hermann Burr, Harald Hannerz, Sylvia Jankowiak, Ute Latza |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Předmět: |
Adult
Employment Male medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Adolescent medicine.medical_treatment Denmark Ischemic heart disease Myocardial Ischemia Disease Anxiety Drug Prescriptions Cardiovascular risk factor Danish Cohort Studies Young Adult Risk Factors medicine Humans cardiovascular diseases Poisson Distribution Registries Young adult Antihypertensive Agents Antihypertensive medication Rehabilitation Job insecurity business.industry Age Factors Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Middle Aged language.human_language Occupational Diseases Psychosocial work factor Emergency medicine Physical therapy language Female Perception Original Article medicine.symptom business Cohort study |
Zdroj: | International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health |
ISSN: | 0340-0131 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00420-015-1030-5 |
Popis: | Purpose To determine the effect of job insecurity based on repeated measurements on ischemic heart disease (IHD) and on antihypertensive medication. Methods The study population consists of 12,559 employees aged 18–59 years of the Danish Work Environment Cohort Study. With an open cohort design, data from up to four representative waves were linked to four registers. Poisson regression with time-dependent covariates was used to estimate the rate ratio (RR) with confidence interval (CI) of perceived job insecurity associated with first-time IHD hospitalization or mortality 1991–2010 (n = 561 cases) and incident dispensing of prescribed antihypertensive medications 1996–2010 (n = 2,402 cases). Results Participants with perceived job insecurity filled more antihypertensive prescriptions (age-, gender-, and calendar year-adjusted RR 1.23, 95 % CI 1.12–1.33) and had a borderline significant higher IHD incidence (RR 1.23, 95 % CI 0.98–1.55). In a subanalysis, the risk of antihypertensive medication dispensed was only significant among employees with worries about both unemployment and poor reemployment opportunities. After explorative stratifications by age, gender, and occupational status, perceived job insecurity was associated with more dispensing of antihypertensive medications to participants less than 50 years of age. Conclusions In a country with high social security and active labor market policy, employees with the feeling of an insecure job have a modestly increased risk to fill an antihypertensive prescription. Further studies on health risks of job insecurity should consider improved exposure assessment, earlier outcomes such as medication in order to increase statistical power, and identification of vulnerable population groups. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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