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Cumulative impact of high job demands, low job control and high job insecurity on midlife depression and anxiety: A prospective cohort study of Australian employees

Version 2 2024-06-06, 05:01
Version 1 2023-05-24, 03:34
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 05:01 authored by LS Too, L Leach, Peter ButterworthPeter Butterworth
ObjectiveThere is a lack of evidence concerning the prospective effect of cumulative exposure to psychosocial job stressors over time on mental ill-health. This study aimed to assess whether cumulative exposure to poor quality jobs places employees at risk of future common mental disorder.MethodsData were from the Personality and Total Health Through Life project (n=1279, age 40–46 at baseline). Data reported on the cumulative exposure to multiple indicators of poor psychosocial job quality over time (ie, a combination of low control, high demands and high insecurity) and future common mental disorder (ie, depressive and/or anxiety symptom scores above a validated threshold) 12 years later. Data were analysed using logistic regression models and controlled for potential confounders across the lifespan.ResultsCumulative exposure to poor-quality work (particularly more secure work) on multiple occasions elevated the risk of subsequent common mental disorder, independent of social, health, verbal intelligence and personality trait confounders (OR=1.30, 95% CI 1.06 to 1.59).ConclusionsOur findings show that cumulative exposure to poor psychosocial job quality over time independently predicts future common mental disorder—supporting the need for workplace interventions to prevent repeated exposure of poor quality work.

History

Journal

Occupational and Environmental Medicine

Volume

78

Pagination

400-408

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1351-0711

eISSN

1470-7926

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

6

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group