The role of job strain in understanding midlife common mental disorder: a national birth cohort study
Long-standing concerns exist about reverse causation and residual confounding in the prospective association between job strain and risk of future common mental disorders. We aimed to address these concerns through analysis of data collected in the UK National Child Development Study, a large Britis...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Lancet. Psychiatry 2018-06, Vol.5 (6), p.498-506 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Long-standing concerns exist about reverse causation and residual confounding in the prospective association between job strain and risk of future common mental disorders. We aimed to address these concerns through analysis of data collected in the UK National Child Development Study, a large British cohort study.
Data from the National Child Development Study (n=6870) were analysed by use of multivariate logistic regression to investigate the prospective association between job strain variables at age 45 years and risk of future common mental disorders at age 50 years, controlling for lifetime psychiatric history and a range of other possible confounding variables across the lifecourse. Population attributable fractions were calculated to estimate the public health effect of job strain on midlife mental health.
In the final model, adjusted for all measured confounders, high job demands (odds ratio 1·70, 95% CI 1·25–2·32; p=0·0008), low job control (1·89, 1·29–2·77; p=0·0010), and high job strain (2·22, 1·59–3·09; p |
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ISSN: | 2215-0366 2215-0374 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S2215-0366(18)30137-8 |