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Open AccessHighly AccessResearch article

A prospective study of cumulative job stress in relation to mental health

Isabelle Godin1 email, France Kittel1 email, Yves Coppieters2 email and Johannes Siegrist3 email

1School of Public Health Université Libre de Bruxelles, HealthPsychology Unit CP 596, 808 Route de Lennik, 1070 Brussels, Belgium

2School of Public Health Université Libre de Bruxelles, Epidemiology Department, 808 Route de Lennik, 1070 Brussels, Belgium

3Department of Medical Sociology, University of Duesseldorf, Universitaetsstr. 1, 40225 Duesseldorf, Germany

author email corresponding author email

BMC Public Health 2005, 5:67doi:10.1186/1471-2458-5-67

Published: 15 June 2005

Abstract

Background

This study tests associations between psychosocial stress at work measured by the effort-reward imbalance model in a dynamic perspective, and multiple indicators of poor mental health, in a prospective design.

Methods

1986 male and female employees from four Belgian enterprises were followed-up over one year within the framework of the Somstress study. Based on two consecutive measurements, an index of cumulative job stress was constructed and its associations with five indicators of mental health were studied, excluding caseness at entry (for depression, anxiety, somatisation, chronic fatigue and psychotropic drug consumption respectively). Taking into account the longitudinal design, four categories of job stress are defined: 1) employees free from stress at both measures, 2) job stress present at first measure but not at the second one, 3) recent onset of job stress as evidenced by second measure 4) workers exposed to stress at both measures. Multivariate logistic regression with appropriate adjustments was applied.

Results

In bivariate analysis, a clear graded association of cumulative job stress with all five mental health indicators is observed, both in men and women. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, recent onset of stress is strongly associated with poor mental health among men (odds ratios ranging from 1.8 to 4.6), while cumulative stress shows strongest effects on mental health in women (odds ratios ranging from 1.4 to 7.1).

Conclusion

Cumulative experience and recent onset of job stress in terms of high effort spent and low reward received is associated with elevated risk of all five indicators of poor mental health at follow-up in a large cohort of employees.


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