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Psychosocial working conditions in a representative sample of working Australians 2001–2008: an analysis of changes in inequalities over time

journal contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by Tony LaMontagneTony LaMontagne, L Krnjacki, A Kavanagh, R Bentley
Background A number of widely prevalent job stressors have been identified as modifiable risk factors for common mental and physical illnesses such as depression and cardiovascular disease, yet there has been relatively little study of population trends in exposure to job stressors over time. The aims of this paper were to assess: (1) overall time trends in job control and security and (2) whether disparities by sex, age, skill level and employment arrangement were changing over time in the Australian working population. Methods Job control and security were measured in eight annual waves (2000–2008) from the Australian nationally-representative Household Income and Labour Dynamics of Australia panel survey (n=13 188 unique individuals for control and n=13 182 for security). Observed and model-predicted time trends were generated. Models were generated using population-averaged longitudinal linear regression, with year fitted categorically. Changes in disparities over time by sex, age group, skill level and employment arrangement were tested as interactions between each of these stratifying variables and time. Results While significant disparities persisted for disadvantaged compared with advantaged groups, results suggested that inequalities in job control narrowed among young workers compared with older groups and for casual, fixed-term and self-employed compared with permanent workers. A slight narrowing of disparities over time in job security was noted for gender, age, employment arrangement and occupational skill level. Conclusions Despite the favourable findings of small reductions in disparities in job control and security, significant cross-sectional disparities persist. Policy and practice intervention to improve psychosocial working conditions for disadvantaged groups could reduce these persisting disparities and associated illness burdens.

History

Journal

Occupational and Environmental Medicine

Volume

70

Issue

9

Pagination

639 - 647

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group

Location

London, UK

ISSN

1351-0711

eISSN

1470-7926

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal