Relationship between Two Job Stress Models and Coronary Risk Factors among Japanese Part-Time Female Employees of a Retail Company

The objective of this study was to explore the associations between two major job stress models (job strain and effort-reward imbalance) and coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factors (blood pressure; total, high (HDL) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol; and triglycerides) in Japanese part...

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Published inJournal of Occupational Health Vol. 47; no. 3; pp. 201 - 210
Main Authors Kobayashi, Yuka, Hirose, Toshio, Tada, Yumiko, Tsutsumi, Akizumi, Kawakami, Norito
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Australia JAPAN SOCIETY FOR OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH 01.05.2005
Oxford University Press
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ISSN1341-9145
1348-9585
1348-9585
DOI10.1539/joh.47.201

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Summary:The objective of this study was to explore the associations between two major job stress models (job strain and effort-reward imbalance) and coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factors (blood pressure; total, high (HDL) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol; and triglycerides) in Japanese part-time female employees of a retail company. The study population was either 35 yr old or between 40 and 63 yr old. Data collection was carried out in 2002; a total of 1,401 subjects participated in a medical examination and completed a questionnaire. After adjusting for other covariates (age, relative weight, tobacco use, alcohol consumption, lack of exercise, education, marital status, history of child bearing, medical treatment for disease, and occupation), a significant association was found between the effort-reward imbalance, a “high-cost and low-gain” condition at work, and a high prevalence of low HDL cholesterol (Odds ratio = 4.4). A weak but unexpected association was found between job strain and low prevalence of low HDL cholesterol. In explanatory analysis with individual components of the two models, associations were evident between high extrinsic effort and high prevalence of low HDL cholesterol and low prevalence of high triglyceride, high job control and low prevalence of high systolic blood pressure, and high job demands and low prevalence of high systolic and diastolic blood pressure. In this cross-sectional study of Japanese part-time working women, a significant association was found between effort-reward imbalance and unfavorable HDL cholesterol profiles. The findings did not support the hypothesis that job strain is associated with CHD risk factors.
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ISSN:1341-9145
1348-9585
1348-9585
DOI:10.1539/joh.47.201