The attribution of work environment in explaining gender differences in long-term sickness absence: results from the prospective DREAM study

Merete Labriola, Kari Anne Holte, Karl Bang Christensen, Helene Feveile, Kristina Alexanderson, Thomas Lund

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    Abstract

    OBJECTIVES: To identify differences in risk of long-term sickness absence between female and male employees in Denmark and to examine to what extent differences could be explained by work environment factors.

    METHODS: A cohort of 5026 employees (49.1% women, mean age 40.4years; 50.9% men, mean age 40.2years) was interviewed in 2000 regarding gender, age, family status, socio-economic position and psychosocial and physical work environment factors. The participants were followed for 18months in order to assess their incidence of long-term sickness absence exceeding 8 consecutive weeks.

    RESULTS: 298 workers (5.9%) received sickness absence compensation for 8weeks or more. Women had an excess risk of 37% compared to men, when adjusting for age, family status and socio-economic position. Physical work environment exposures could not explain this difference, whereas differences in psychosocial work environment exposures explained 32% of the differences in risk of long-term sickness absence between men and women, causing the effect of gender to become statistically insignificant. The combined effect of physical and psychosocial factors was similar, explaining 30% of the gender difference.

    CONCLUSION: Differences in psychosocial work environments in terms of emotional demands, reward at work, management quality and role conflicts, explained roughly 30% of women's excess long-term sickness absence risk. Assuming women and men had identical working conditions would leave the larger part of the gender difference in long-term sickness absence from work unexplained.

    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    Sider (fra-til)703-5
    Antal sider3
    TidsskriftOccupational and Environmental Medicine
    Vol/bind68
    Udgave nummer9
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - sep. 2011

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