Skip to main content
  • Research article
  • Open access
  • Published:

Sense of coherence and diabetes: A prospective occupational cohort study

Abstract

Background

Sense of coherence (SOC) is an individual characteristic related to a positive life orientation leading to effective coping. A weak SOC has been associated with indicators of general morbidity and mortality. However, the relationship between SOC and diabetes has not been studied in prospective design. The present study prospectively examined the relationship between a weak SOC and the incidence of diabetes.

Methods

The relationship between a weak SOC and the incidence of diabetes was investigated among 5827 Finnish male employees aged 18–65 at baseline (1986). SOC was measured by questionnaire survey at baseline. Data on prescription diabetes drugs from 1987 to 2004 were obtained from the Drug Imbursement Register held by the Social Insurance Institution.

Results

During the follow-up, 313 cases of diabetes were recorded. A weak SOC was associated with a 46% higher risk of diabetes in participants who had been =<50 years of age on entry into the study. This association was independent of age, education, marital status, psychological distress, self-rated health, smoking status, binge drinking and physical activity. No similar association was observed in older employees.

Conclusion

The results suggest that besides focusing on well-known risk factors for diabetes, strengthening SOC in employees of =<50 years of age can also play a role in attempts to tackle increasing rates of diabetes.

Peer Review reports

Background

The prevalence of diabetes is rapidly increasing. This is the case especially for Type-2 diabetes [1]. According to the Global Burden of Disease Study by the World Health Organization (WHO), the total number of people with diabetes is estimated to rise from 171 million (2.8%) in 2000 to 366 million (4.4%) in 2030 and this figure is probably an underestimate [2]. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) reports that in the US population over 65 years of age, 18% to 20% have diabetes, with 40% having either diabetes or its precursor form of impaired glucose tolerance [3].

Diabetes is becoming more prevalent also in Finland. In 1991, 100,000 people used prescription diabetes drugs reimbursable under the National Insurance scheme. By 2004 this figure rose to 161,305. It was estimated that in 2004 about 200,000 Finns suffered from diabetes (4% of the population). Of these, the vast majority, 190,000 had Type-2 diabetes. Similarly to other countries, diabetes was more common among men, older and less educated people [4]. Type-2 diabetes is still rather rare in under 51-year-old Finns [5].

Given that Type-2 diabetes is partly preventable, it is important to identify not only physical and health behavioural risk factors but also psychological factors that can contribute to promoting good health [6]. The concept of sense of coherence (SOC) was introduced by Antonovsky as a part of the salutogenic theory, which examines the question why some people regardless of encountering stressors and major life events stay healthy while others do not [7]. SOC comprises three dimensions, that is, comprehensibility, manageability, and meaningfulness. Comprehensibility concerns the tendency to perceive stimuli in a clear, ordered and structured way. Manageability concerns a generalised perception about the adequacy and sufficiency of coping resources available to the individual. Meaningfulness refers to the extent that a person believes that the investment of activity and energy in their life tasks is worthwhile, thereby reflecting affectivity and motivation. SOC can be viewed as an enduring person or 'view-of-life' characteristic that stabilises in early adulthood [8]. According to Antonovsky [7], individuals with a strong SOC are more capable of perceiving stressors with sense and structure, and are more efficacious about their ability to deal with them.

Furthermore, in the SOC theory it is hypothesised that SOC influences an individual's position on the health – disease continuum. Therefore, in a given situation two individuals with a weak SOC might, after encountering stressors, end up with different outcomes on their health much depending on their personal, possibly bio-medically determined qualities.

A recent systematic review on Antonovsky's SOC scale and health identified SOC as a health promoting resource, which strengthens resilience and develops a positive subjective state of health [9]. Even if the theory of SOC is oriented towards causes of health rather than illness, in the literature negative health outcomes of weak SOC have been widely studied. A weak SOC has predicted psychological strain [10]. In longitudinal studies, a weak SOC has also been associated with various indicators of poor health, such as an increased incidence of medically certified sickness absence [11], an increased risk of myocardial infarction [12] and an increased all cause mortality [13].

Although many factors related to a weak SOC, such as inadequate coping skills, higher chronic strain and health-damaging behaviours are likely to be associated with an increased risk of diabetes, little is known about whether a weak SOC elevates the risk of diabetes. It can be hypothesized, however, that people with a weak SOC have an increased risk of diabetes because of increased vulnerability to environmental stressors and ineffective responses to them. In previous studies, a weak SOC has been associated with health-risk behaviours, such as hazardous alcohol consumption [14], lower physical activity [15] and unhealthy food choices [16]. Two recent Swedish cross-sectional studies addressed the relationship between SOC and Type-2 diabetes [17, 18]. In both of these studies, a significant association was found between a weak SOC and diabetes. However, as reversed causality can explain these associations, prospective studies are needed.

The importance of SOC in the development of chronic disease may depend on the age of the person. Recently it was found that weak SOC increased the likelihood of a grant of disability pension among employees who were =<50 years of age at baseline [19].

Our prospective cohort study investigated whether differences in SOC predicted incidence of diabetes up to 18 years later in initially healthy male employees. In our study, we controlled for several baseline factors associated with both SOC and diabetes. Employees who were =<50 years of age and older employees were examined separately. Given the long-term development of impaired glucose tolerance and the high average age of onset of diabetes [5], we assume that in 18–50-year-olds the long-term preventive power of SOC on diabetes could be particularly observed, whereas in older industrial employees poor health and other bio-medical risk factors related to diabetes are more likely to explain the onset of diabetes.

Methods

This study is part of the ongoing Still Working -Study examining a wide range of long-term antecedents of health, morbidity and mortality in a 18-year follow-up among industrial white- and blue-collar employees. The survey data are initially based on a long-term research programme of the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health within a multinational forest industry corporation originally founded in Finland [20].

Study design, sample selection, and description of the final study population are presented in Figure 1. In 1986, a questionnaire survey on demographics, psychosocial characteristics and health-risk behaviours was sent to all 12,173 (69% blue-collar workers, 77% male) employees of this company in Finland. Altogether 76% of the personnel responded to the questionnaire, the lowest response rate being among the hourly-paid blue-collar workers (69%).

Figure 1
figure 1

Study design, sample selection, and description of the final study population.

We included only male employees in our study. The prevalence of diabetes is generally higher among men than among women [4, 21]. In our study population, the number of diabetic women was very low in both age groups (N = 47 in the women less than 51 years of age and N = 14 in the women over 50 years of age) (data not shown). Hence, the analyses among the subgroup of female employees are likely to produce results with poor validity.

Those men who were up to the survey year 1986 (including 1986) free from diabetes and other chronic diseases, who responded to the scale of sense of coherence and other survey items under the study, and who were identified from the database of the National Population Register Centre were included in the final cohort of 5827 employees. At baseline, their mean age was 39.4 years (standard deviation 10.4; range 18–65) and the average organisational tenure was 15.6 years (range 1–45). Of them, 4192 were blue-collar employees who typically worked as monitors of the machines in the industrial plants and maintenance occupations while the white-collar employees (N = 1635) were mostly employed as managers, foremen, and technical staff. Other baseline characteristics are presented in Table 1.

Table 1 Mean of sense of coherence (SOC), age adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) and their 95 percent confidence intervals (95% CIs) for drug imbursement due to diabetes during the follow-up of 18 years by confounding variables at baseline in initially healthy male employees

Information on entitlement to drug imbursement due to diabetes during the period between January 1, 1987 and December 31, 2004 was derived from the national register held by the Social Insurance Institution, Finland, and linked to the data by means of each participant's id number. Id number is a unique number that all Finnish citizens are given at birth and which is used for all contacts with welfare and health care organisations. All study phases were approved by the ethics committee of the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health.

Measures

Sense of coherence

SOC was assessed with a 13-item version of Antonovsky's Orientation to Life Questionnaire measuring the three aspects of SOC, that is, meaningfulness, comprehensibility, and manageability [7]. The respondents were asked to check their level of agreement with each of the items on a seven-point scale (Cronbach's alpha = 0.84). The example items are as follows: "Most of the things you do in the future will probably be completely fascinating" (an item assessing meaningfulness)"; "Do you have the feeling that you are in an unfamiliar situation and don't know what to do?" (comprehensibility); and "How often do you have the feeling that you're not sure you can keep things under control?" (manageability) [7]. This summary score has been used in various studies on Finnish employees and the validity of the scale has been found to be good [11, 2224].

A summary score of ratings of all SOC items was constructed by adding up the scores of individual items [22]. In our sample, the mean of SOC was 64.51 (standard deviation (SD) 10.81). A high score in the scale indicates a strong SOC. For the analysis, the summary score was divided into tertiles indicating weak, medium and strong SOC.

Drug imbursement due to diabetes

We collected data on drugs reimbursable under the National Insurance scheme. All persons who were eligible for reimbursement of medicine due to diabetes (yes vs. no) or some other severe disease (yes vs. no) before the assessment of SOC (1964–1986), during the assessment of SOC (in 1986), and after the assessments were obtained from the Drug Imbursement Register held by the Social Insurance Institution, Finland. This national registry covers virtually all information on the entitlement to reimbursed drugs relating to long-term chronic illnesses for each Finnish citizen residing in Finland, regardless of age, sex and educational attainment. The register of the Social Insurance Institution is comprised of outpatient data based on the WHO Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification [25]. All entitlements for drug imbursement are prescribed by a physician and authorized by the Social Insurance Institution. The first date of the right for the reimbursed drug due to diabetes was obtained for all the study participants and non-participants, who were initially free from diabetes and other chronic diseases according to the Drug Imbursement Register.

Ascertainment of mortality

Mortality data from 1 April 1986 to 31 December 2004 were obtained from the National Death Registry kept by Statistics Finland (official Finnish government statistics). The database provides virtually complete population mortality data [26]. The dates and causes (from death certificates) of death were obtained for all the participants.

Other variables

Data on age and marital status (married vs. not married) were obtained from the National Population Register Centre, while educational attainment was assessed with the questionnaire. The categories of educational attainment were as follows: basic education (primary school), secondary education, and tertiary education (institute, college or university).

The following health-risk behaviours were measured at baseline using the questionnaire: regular smoking (yes vs. no), binge drinking (excessive drinking leading intoxication twice or more per month vs. less than twice per month) [27], and physical activity. The response options for physical activity (frequency of exercise) were as follows: 1 = 'daily or nearly daily', 2 = 'once a week', 3 = 'two times a month', 4 = 'a few times a year', 5 = 'never'. As regular physical exercise at least once a week has been associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes in working age men [28], this variable was dichotomised for the analysis (exercising once a week or more vs. less than once a week).

It is possible that psychological distress and poor subjective health can indicate sub-clinical diabetes and predict the subsequent incidence of diabetes. Therefore they were controlled for in this study. Psychological distress was assessed in the survey with an 11-item four-point scale measuring insomnia, depressive symptoms, tension and anxiety [29, 30]. A summary scale was formed and dichotomised (the respondents in the highest quartile were defined as having high distress, Cronbach's alpha = 0.89). Poor self-rated health was indicated by health ratings less than good on a five-point single item scale: "How would you estimate your current state of health compared to your age mates?"[31]. The response alternatives were as follows: 1 = very poor, 2 = poor, 3 = average, 4 = good, 5 = very good. The measure was dichotomized by grouping the response scores 1 to 3 into the category of poor self-rated health and scores 4 and 5 into the category of good self-rated health.

Statistical Analysis

Means and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of SOC were first computed for each diabetes risk factor. Significance of differences in distribution of SOC in relation to each of the potential confounding variables was determined by means of analysis of variance. Associations between SOC and diabetes were assessed with Cox proportional-hazards models. For each participant, person-days of follow-up were calculated from January 1, 1987 to the death, to the entitlement to drugs related to diabetes or to December 31, 2004, whichever of these three options came first. The time-dependent interaction term between predictor and logarithm of follow-up period was nonsignificant, confirming that the proportional hazards assumption was justified (p = 0.42). Hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% CIs for tertiles of SOC (weak, medium, strong) provided risk estimates. At the first stage, age-adjusted HRs and 95% CIs for new entitlement for diabetes medication were calculated by potential confounding variables at baseline (Table 1).

At the second stage, the SOC variable was regressed together with baseline age, educational attainment, marital status, psychological distress and self-rated health (Table 2, Model 1). At the third stage, the SOC variable was additionally regressed with baseline health-risk behaviours (smoking, binge drinking, and physical activity) at baseline (Model 2). The analyses were conducted with the TPHREG procedure in the SAS 9.1 statistical program package. All analyses were carried out separately for employees of =<50 years of age and >50 years of age and a test for age interaction was performed.

Table 2 Hazard ratios (HR) and their 95 percent confidence intervals (95% CIs) related to increased incidence of drug imbursement due to diabetes for initially healthy male employees =<50 years and >50 years of age during the 18-year follow-up according to the level of sense of coherence (SOC)

Results

A total of 313 (5.7%) participants were entitled to drug imbursement due to diabetes during the average follow-up of 17 years and 1 month (range 0.8–18 years). Of the participants, 558 (9.6%) died during the follow-up. For the participants who were entitled to drug imbursement due to diabetes during the follow-up, the mean before the entitlement was 13 years, with a range of 0.8–18.8 years. The distributions by baseline education, marital status, psychological distress, self-rated health and health-risk behaviours are presented in Table 1.

As can be seen from Table 1, in the regression models all socio-demographic characteristics predicted diabetes after the effect of age was controlled for. Low educational attainment and not being married independently increased the risk of becoming entitled to drug imbursement due to diabetes during the subsequent 18 years. In addition, being a smoker, binge drinking, and having a low level of physical activity were risk factors for subsequent diabetes medication.

After adjustment for age, educational attainment, marital status, psychological distress, self-rated health and health risk behaviours, a weak SOC was significantly associated with an increased risk of drug imbursement due to diabetes (HR = 1.36, 95% CI: 1.01–1.84; p for trend = 0.048) (data not shown). Table 2 presents the association between SOC and subsequent diabetes medication by age group. After adjustment for educational attainment, marital status, psychological distress and self-rated health, a weak SOC was significantly associated with an increased risk of drug imbursement due to diabetes in the employees who were =<50 years of age at baseline (HR = 1.46, 95% CI: 1.05–2.03). The similar pattern in results prevailed even after the models were further adjusted for health-risk behaviours. In contrast, a weak SOC did not predict drug imbursement due to diabetes among employees who were >50 years of age at baseline.

Figure 2 displays the survival curves representing two levels of SOC in the younger age group. It shows that as the level of SOC decreases, the risk of drug imbursement due to diabetes increases during the years of follow-up (log-rank test chi-square = 6.36, p = 0.01), the participants with a weak SOC having the shortest time before the entitlement to diabetes drugs. The men who had medium or strong level of SOC had a very similar risk of diabetes incidence during the follow-up and therefore these groups were combined in the Figure 2.

Figure 2
figure 2

The predictive impact of sense of coherence (SOC) (weak vs. medium/strong SOC) on drug imbursement due to diabetes during follow-up of 18 years among initially healthy male employees =<50 years of age at baseline.

Discussion

Although earlier research has shown that a weak SOC can predict general morbidity and mortality [11, 13, 19, 32], only little is known whether it can predict specific severe chronic diseases [12]. As far as we know, there are no previous prospective studies of the relationship between SOC and diabetes. The results of this large scale longitudinal study among Finnish male employees showed that in a 18-year follow-up, initial weak SOC was associated with almost a 50% higher risk of diabetes in employees aged =<50 years at the start of the study. This result could not be explained by a variety of controlled baseline socio-demographic, psychosocial and health-risk behaviour variables. Therefore these results suggest that there can be a direct relationship between a weak SOC and physiological consequences affecting health. The result is in accordance with two earlier cross-sectional studies indicating a relationship between SOC and diabetes [17, 18].

Moreover, our findings are in line with recent prospective evidence showing a link between a weak SOC and an increased risk of disability pension among employees =<50 years of age in entry of study [19], although it should be noted that most of the principal causes for disability pensions are not directly related to diabetes.

We did not find a significant association between SOC and diabetes in the older age group (>50 year-olds). With increasing age the sensitivity of SOC towards diabetes might decrease since the risk of many different kinds of diseases is concomitantly increasing in older people which again also might influence the SOC scores. Furthermore, it is possible that poor health and other bio-medical risk factors related to diabetes are more likely to explain the onset of diabetes in older industrial employees. In line with the results by Suominen et al. [19], our findings propose that the health-damaging mechanisms related to weak SOC, leading to a higher risk of diabetes, already take place at rather early age.

There are at least three processes that may explain the link between SOC and health [33]. First, common genetic or physiological processes can determine both psychological attributes and disease. Second, individual differences (personality traits or attributes), such as SOC, can influence health promoting (e.g., regular exercise) or damaging (e.g., unhealthy diet) behaviours. Third, individual characteristics can influence the effective implementation of health-related coping behaviour and have an adverse effect on mental health.

Recent research supports Antonovsky's theory that SOC moderates (buffers) the health impacts of adverse life events [34]. A weak SOC might increase experiences of overwhelming and negative stress through autonomous neural pathways, by neuroendocrinological or neuroimmmunological mechanisms [35], and this could be reflected in a higher risk of diabetes. A weak SOC can be interpreted as a lower ability to cope with stressors [7, 17]. Exposure to long-term stress affects the entire neuroendocrine system, activating the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the central sympathetic nervous system [36]. Increased cortisol levels following activation of the HPA axis could play a role in the development of decreased glucose tolerance. Cortisol has been shown to induce insulin resistance by increasing hepatic glucose production, suppressing glucose usage, and inhibiting insulin secretion [37].

SOC is strongly linked with aspects of negative emotionality [10, 38, 39]. Negative emotionality has been associated with higher body mass index and weight gain [40] and hostility with the so-called 'metabolic syndrome'[41], which are all risk factors for Type-2 diabetes. Additionally, people with a weak SOC can perceive their environment as nonsupportive. A weak SOC has been associated with low social support [42], which has in turn been found to increase the risk of poor health [43].

To sum up, a potential combination of stress inducing reactive tendency, inadequate coping systems and unhealthy lifestyle choices characterizing those with a weak SOC may help to explain the association between SOC and diabetes identified in this study.

Strengths and limitations

The cohort size of this study, our capacity to adjust for several traditional risk factors for diabetes, together with reliable prospective ascertainment of entitlement to drug imbursement due to diabetes from national registers provided a unique opportunity to test and confirm the hypothesis that a weak SOC is associated with an increased risk of diabetes. Non-response occurred randomly enough to limit the potential for selection bias. In addition, the observed effect size in employees =<50 years of age was relatively large, a 46% increase in the incidence of diabetes (after adjustment for several traditional risk factors). Further advantages include an exceptionally long the follow-up period. Earlier prospective studies on SOC and objective health outcomes have been based on less than 10 years follow-up periods. The use of long enough follow-up is important as the influence of SOC on severe health outcomes, such as diabetes, is slow to manifest itself.

However, our results should be interpreted in light of some limitations. First, even if a long follow-up can generally be considered as strength, on the other hand individuals can develop other health problems or poor health behaviours during this lengthy time period, and these problems and/or behaviours may have an impact on the eventual development of diabetes.

Second, some patients with Type-2 diabetes do not use medication but try to control their disease with a help of proper diet and exercise. These individuals would not have been identified in this study design. However, due to well developed health screening and occupational health care system in Finland, we can be fairly certain that most cases entitled to reimbursement of diabetes medication were detected in our study. It is possible, nevertheless, that employees who died during the follow-up, especially some of those employees who had a cardiovascular diagnosis (N = 185), may have had an undetected impaired glucose tolerance which may have contributed as a risk factor for death. If this is the case, the effect of weak SOC on diabetes incidence found in this study may be an underestimate.

Third, the Drug Imbursement Register was used as a means of determining the presence of diabetes and other chronic diseases at baseline. However, there are chronic diseases for which medications are not common or for which medications were developed only in recent years. In spite of this, the Drug Imbursement Register can be seen as a fairly reliable and objective data to use in determining a "healthy" status.

Fourth, in this study our outcome was disease even though theoretically SOC is promotive of health rather than illness.

Fifth, the SOC theory is not very specific about diagnoses, whereas our study was specific about the studied outcome. Individual characteristics such as SOC are typically generalised resistance resources, that is, their effects on health are non-specific [44]. When encountering stressors and adverse life events, individuals can react differently and with different health outcomes because of their resources and other characteristics (e.g., work characteristics) [44, 45]. However, in a medical study it is very difficult to include the incidences of diseases that have very different biomedical pathogenesis, such as for example type 2 diabetes and depression, in the same outcome variable. In our opinion, it is important to widen the scope of SOC theory towards various biomedical outcomes, such as coronary heart disease, diabetes or other conditions, and to further specify the psychomedical, psychosocial and psychobehavioral mechanisms through which SOC may affect various health and ill health outcomes, even though this is a dilemma in relation to traditional SOC research since Antonovsky's theory is not diagnosis-specific.

Sixth, the most serious epidemiological shortcoming of our study was that our questionnaire did not include questions about dietary habits, body mass index (BMI) and weight gain and therefore we were unable to examine their mediating role. In previous studies SOC has been associated with unhealthy lifestyles, such as unhealthy food choices [16]. It is possible that the lack of weight-related variables in the analyses have affected the results. Further research needs thus to be conducted to test whether dietary habits, BMI or weight gain could be responsible for the association between SOC and diabetes.

Seventh, our physical activity measure was not optimal for this kind of study since the response options were not specific enough to separate sufficiently people with different frequency of weekly exercise. This shortcoming becomes even more significant since the study did not include data on BMI. Those participants exercising the most frequently are probably the most unlikely to be overweight.

However, regular physical exercise at least once a week has been associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes in initially healthy 35–60-year-old men [28]. Moreover, another study [46] found that for those older adults who were physically active once a week, the risk of all-cause mortality was 40% lower than for those who were physically inactive. For those who were physically active more frequently, the reduction in all-cause mortality risk was about the same as for those who were physically active once a week.

Finally, assessing health behaviours only at baseline can be a limitation as these behaviours may change over 18 years. Finally, it can be assumed that individuals' health may influence their SOC, i.e., the causality between SOC and health may also operate in the other way around. Health represents one of the sources responsible for the maintenance of the level of SOC [7]. However, in earlier research predictive relationships from health to SOC has not been found [11].

Further studies in other countries and in other sectors are needed to confirm and develop our findings as well as determine their generalisability. More research is especially needed to examine the biopsychosocial mechanisms behind the association between SOC and diabetes, and investigate the associations of other individual difference variables with diabetes.

Conclusion

The figures from the WHO show that the number of people with diabetes will at leas more than double by 2030. The human and economic costs of this trend are enormous [2]. Given that Type-2 diabetes is partly preventable, it is important to identify also psychological factors that can contribute to health [6]. Our results provide new evidence that a weak SOC predicts diabetes in male employees who were =<50 years or age in entry into the study. Besides focusing on well-known behavioural risk factors for diabetes, strengthening SOC can also play a role in attempts to tackle increasing rates of diabetes.

Individual characteristics such as SOC are typically generalised resistance resources, that is, their effects on health are non-specific [44]. As a consequence, interventions aimed at increasing resources can have a positive effect on a wide range of outcomes. In other words, strengthening SOC can reduce the risk of also other health problems than diabetes, at least of those with similar biomedical pathogenesis. Individual level interventions [47] can be used to strengthen SOC. Furthermore, in employee populations, workplace interventions targeting such factors as organisational climate and leadership relations could be useful as changes in these factors have been associated with changes in SOC [48]. According to the SOC theory, high SOC is more stable than weak SOC and it thus is possible that work characteristics are more likely to cause modificiations in SOC in persons who score low on the SOC-scale than in persons who score high on the SOC-scale [49]. Therefore employees with low SOC could especially benefit of positive changes in their work environment.

Abbreviations

ATC:

Anatomic Therapeutic Chemical

CI:

confidence interval

HR:

hazard ratio

SD:

standard deviation

SOC:

sense of coherence

WHO:

World Health Organization.

References

  1. Zemmet P, Alberti KGMM, Shaw J: Global and societal implications of the diabetes epidemic. Nature. 2001, 414: 782-787.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  2. Wild S, Roglic G, Green A, Sicree R, King H: Global prevalence of diabetes: estimates for the year 2000 and projections for 2030. Diabetes Care. 2004, 27: 1047-1053.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  3. Harris MI, Flegal KM, Cowie CC, Eberhardt MS, Goldstein DE, Little RR, Wiedmeyer HM, Byrd-Holt DD: Prevalence of diabetes, impaired fasting glucose, and impaired glucose tolerance in U.S. adults. The Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988–1994. Diabetes Care. 1998, 21: 518-24.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  4. Helmiö T, Malminiemi K: Aikuisten diabeteslääkkeiden käyttö ja kustannukset avohoidossa vuonna 2004. [The use and costs of diabetes medication in adult out-patients in 2004]. (In Finnish.). (accessed 9th Nov 2007), [http://www.terveysportti.fi/terveysportti/ekirjat.Naytaartikkeli?p_artikkeli=tab00088]

  5. Niemi M, Winell K: Diabetes Suomessa. Esiintyvyys ja hoidon laadun vaihtelu. [Diabetes in Finland. The prevalence and the variation in the quality of treatment.] (In Finnish.). 2005, Helsinki: STAKES, (accessed 31st Oct 2007), [http://www.diabetes.fi/tiedoston_katsominen.php?dok_id=316]

    Google Scholar 

  6. Amelang M: Using personality variables to predict cancer and heart disease. Eur J Pers. 1997, 11: 319-342.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  7. Antonovsky A: Unraveling the mystery of health: how people manage stress and stay well. 1987, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass

    Google Scholar 

  8. Feldt T, Kokko K, Kinnunen U, Pulkkinen L: The role of family background, school success, and career orientation in the development of sense of coherence. European Psychologist. 2005, 10: 298-308.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  9. Eriksson M, Lindström B: Antonovsky's sense of coherence scale and the relation with health: a systematic review. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2006, 60: 376-381.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  10. Hoge T, Bussing A: The impact of sense of coherence and negative affectivity on the work stressor-strain relationship. J Occup Health Psychol. 2004, 9: 195-205.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Kivimäki M, Feldt T, Vahtera J, Nurmi JE: Sense of coherence and health: evidence from two cross-lagged longitudinal samples. Soc Sci Med. 2000, 50: 583-597.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  12. Poppius E, Tenkanen L, Kalimo R, Heinsalmi P: The sense of coherence, occupation and the risk of coronary heart disease in the Helsinki Heart Study. Soc Sci Med. 1999, 49: 109-120.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  13. Surtees P, Wainwright N, Luben R, Khaw KT, Day NE: Sense of coherence and mortality in men and women in the EPIC-Norfolk United Kingdom prospective cohort study. Am J Epidemiol. 2003, 158: 1202-1209.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  14. Neuner B, Miller P, Maulhardt A, Weiss-Gerlach E, Neumann T, Lau A, Brähler E, Helmert U, Haas N, Müller JM, Wernecke KD, Spies C: Hazardous alcohol consumption and sense of coherence in emergency department patients with minor trauma. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2006, 82: 143-150.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  15. Kuuppelomäki M, Utriainen P: A 3 year follow-up study of health care students' sense of coherence and related smoking, drinking and physical exercise factors. Int J Nurs. 2003, 40: 383-388.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  16. Lindmark U, Stegmayr B, Nilsson B: Food selection associated with sense of coherence in adults. Nutr J. 2005, 28: 9-

    Article  Google Scholar 

  17. Agardh EE, Ahlbom A, Andersson T, Efendic S, Grill V, Hallqvist J, Norman A, Ostenson CG: Work stress and low sense of coherence is associated with type 2 diabetes in middle-aged Swedish women. Diabetes Care. 2003, 26: 719-724.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  18. Hilding A, Eriksson AK, Agardh EE, Grill V, Ahlbom A, Efendic S, Ostenson CG: The impact of family history of diabetes and lifestyle factors on abnormal glucose regulation in middle-aged Swedish men and women. Diabetologia. 2006, 49: 2589-2598.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  19. Suominen S, Gould R, Ahvenainen J, Vahtera J, Uutela A, Koskenvuo M: Sense of coherence and disability pensions. A nationwide, register based prospective population study of 2196 adult Finns. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2005, 59: 455-459.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  20. Kalimo R, Toppinen S: Organizational well-being: Ten years of research and development in a forest industry corporation. Preventing stress, improving productivity: European case studies in the workplace. Edited by: Kompier M, Cooper C. 1999, London: Routledge, 52-85.

    Google Scholar 

  21. The DECODE Study Group: Age- and sex-specific prevalences of diabetes and impaired glucose regulation in 13 European cohorts. Diabetes Care. 2003, 26: 61-69.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  22. Toppinen-Tanner S, Kalimo R: Psychological symptoms and competence at three organizational levels of industrial design: the main and moderating role of sense of coherence. Psychol Rep. 2003, 92: 667-682.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  23. Feldt T, Leskinen E, Kinnunen U, Mauno S: Longitudinal factor analysis models in the assessment of the stability of sense of coherence. Pers Indiv Dif. 2000, 28: 239-257.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  24. Feldt T, Lintula H, Suominen S, Koskenvuo M, Vahtera J, Kivimäki M: Structural validity and temporal stability of the 13-item sense of coherence scale: prospective evidence from the population-based HeSSup study. Qual Life Res. 2007, 16: 483-493.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  25. WHO Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology: Guidelines for ATC classification and DDD assigment. 2004, Oslo: WHO collaborating centre for drug statistics

    Google Scholar 

  26. Central Statistical Office of Finland: Causes of death 1987. Health 1989. 1989, Helsinki: Statistics Finland

    Google Scholar 

  27. Institute of Medicine: Broadening the base of treatment for alcohol problems: A report of a study by a committee of the Institute of Medicine, Division of Mental Health and Behavioral Medicine. 1990, Washington, DC: National Academy Press

    Google Scholar 

  28. Okada K, Hayashi T, Tsumura K, Suematsu C, Endo G, Fujii S: Leisure-time physical activity at weekends and the risk of Type 2 diabetes mellitus in Japanese men: the Osaka Health Survey. Diabet Med. 2000, 17: 53-8.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  29. Elo A-L, Leppänen A, Lindström K, Ropponen T: Occupational stress questionnaire: User's instructions. 1992, Helsinki: Finnish Institute of Occupational Health

    Google Scholar 

  30. Goldberg D, Williams P: A user's guide to the General Health Questionnaire. 1988, Berkshire: NFER-Nelson Publishing Co

    Google Scholar 

  31. Idler EL, Angel RJ: Self-rated health and mortality in the NHANES-I epidemiologic follow-up study. Am J Public Health. 1990, 80: 446-452.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  32. Suominen S, Helenius H, Blomberg H: Sense of coherence as a predictor of subjective state of health: results of 4 years of follow-up of adults. J Psychosom Res. 2001, 50: 77-86.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  33. Ozer D, Benet-Martínez V: Personality and the prediction of consequential outcomes. Annu Rev Psychol. 2006, 57: 401-421.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  34. Richardson CG, Ratner PA: Sense of coherence as a moderator of the effects of stressful life events on health. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2005, 59: 979-984.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  35. Cacioppo JT: Social neuroscience: autonomic, neuroendocrine, and immune responses to stress. Psychophysiology. 1994, 31: 113-128.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  36. Björntorp P, Holm G, Rosmond R: Hypothalamic arousal, insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus: British Diabetic Association. Diabet Med. 1999, 16: 373-383.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  37. Delaunay F, Khan A, Cintra A, Davani B, Ling ZC, Andersson A, Ostenson CG, Gustafsson J, Efendic S, Okret S: Pancreatic β cells are important targets for the diabetogenic effects of glucocorticoids. J Clin Invest. 1997, 100: 2094-2098.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  38. Surtees PG, Wainwright NW, Luben R, Khaw KT, Day NE: Mastery, sense of coherence, and mortality: evidence of independent associations from the EPIC-Norfolk prospective cohort study. Health Psychol. 2006, 25: 102-110.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  39. Gibson L, Cook M: Neuroticsm and sense of coherence. Psychol Rep. 1996, 79: 343-349.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  40. Brummett BH, Babyak MA, Williams RB, Barefoot JC, Costa PT, Siegler IC: NEO personality domains and gender predict levels and trends in body mass index over 14 years during midlife. J Res Pers. 2006, 40: 222-236.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  41. Niaura R, Banks SM, Ward KD, Stoney CM, Spiro A, Aldwin CM, Landsberg L, Weiss ST: Hostility and the metabolic syndrome in older men: The normative aging study. Psychosom Med. 2000, 62: 7-16.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  42. Volanen SM, Lahelma E, Silventoinen K, Suominen S: Factors contributing to sense of coherence among men and women. Eur J Public Health. 2004, 14: 322-30.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  43. Eng PM, Rimm EB, Fitzmauric G, Kawachi I: Social ties and change in social ties in relation to subsequent total and cause-specific mortality and coronary heart disease incidence in men. Am J Epidemiol. 2002, 15: 700-9.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  44. Nelson DL, Simmons BL: Health psychology and work stress: a more positive approach. Handbook of Occupational Health Psychology. Edited by: Quick JC, Tetrick LE. 2003, Washington DC: APA, 97-119.

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  45. Landsbergis PA, Schnall PL, Belkic KL, Baker D, Schwartz JE, Pickering TG: The workplace and cardiovascular disease: Relevance and potential role for occupational health psychology. Handbook of Occupational Health Psychology. Edited by: Quick JC, Tetrick LE. 2003, Washington DC: APA, 265-87.

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  46. Sundquist K, Qvist J, Sundquist J, Johansson SE: Frequent and occasional physical activity in the elderly: a 12-year follow-up study of mortality. Am J Prev Med. 2004, 27: 22-7.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  47. Langeland E, Riise T, Hanestad B-R, Nortvedt MW, Kristoffersen K, Wahl AK: The effect of salutogenic treatment principles on coping with mental health problems. A randomised controlled trial. Patient Educ Couns. 2006, 62: 212-9.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  48. Feldt T, Kinnunen U, Mauno S: A mediational model of sense of coherence in the work context: a one-year follow-up study. J Organizational Behavior. 2000, 21: 461-76.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  49. Feldt T, Kivimäki M, Rantala A, Tolvanen A: Sense of coherence and work characteristics: A cross-lagged structural equation model among managers. J Occupat Organizat Psychol. 2004, 77: 323-42.

    Article  Google Scholar 

Pre-publication history

Download references

Acknowledgements

This study was supported by grants from the Academy of Finland (project #110451), the Institute of Work, Health and Organisations (Research Enhancement Award 2007; Anne M. Kouvonen), and the Finnish Work Environment Fund (project #106417; Ari Väänänen).

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Anne M Kouvonen.

Additional information

Competing interests

The author(s) declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

AMK and AV together designed the study and planned the data analyses. AMK directed the implementation of the study and was the principal author of the paper. AV carried out the data analyses and contributed to interpreting the results and writing the paper. SAW, TH and ST-T contributed to interpretation of the results and manuscript writing. AK was involved in the data collection, constructed many of the measures and helped to prepare Materials and Methods section. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Authors’ original submitted files for images

Below are the links to the authors’ original submitted files for images.

Authors’ original file for figure 1

Authors’ original file for figure 2

Rights and permissions

This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Kouvonen, A.M., Väänänen, A., Woods, S.A. et al. Sense of coherence and diabetes: A prospective occupational cohort study. BMC Public Health 8, 46 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-8-46

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-8-46

Keywords