Workplace conditions, socioeconomic status, and the risk of mortality and acute myocardial infarction: the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.
J Lynch,
N Krause,
G A Kaplan,
J Tuomilehto and
J T Salonen
Western Consortium for Public Health, Human Population Laboratory, Berkeley, Calif 94704, USA.
OBJECTIVES: This study investigated whether the associationbetween workplace conditions and the risk of all-cause and cardiovascularmortality and acute myocardial infarction differed by socioeconomicstatus. METHODS: Prospective data were used to examine theseassociations in 2297 Finnish men, with adjustment for prevalentdiseases and biological, behavioral, and psychosocial covariates,and stratified by employment status and workplace social support.RESULTS: Elevated age-adjusted relative hazards for all-causemortality were found for men who reported high demands, lowresources, and low income; high demands, high resources, andlow income; and low demands, high resources, and low income.Similar patterns were found for cardiovascular mortality. Incontrast, elevated age-adjusted relative hazards for acute myocardialinfarction were observed only in men who reported high demands,low resources, and low income. These results did not differby level of workplace social support or employment status. CONCLUSIONS:The negative effects of workplace conditions on mortality andof myocardial infarction risk depended on income level and werelargely mediated by known risk factors.
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