Psychosocial and other working conditions in relation to body mass index in a representative sample of Australian workers

Mar 4, 2006BMC public health

How Social and Work Factors Are Linked to Body Weight in Australian Workers

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Abstract

A total of 1101 interviews revealed differing patterns of psychosocial working conditions and their associations with body mass index (BMI) in men and women.

  • No associations were found between job strain or effort/reward imbalance and BMI among men and women after adjusting for confounders.
  • Women exhibited a negative association between low reward and BMI.
  • Men showed positive associations between high effort, high psychological demand, and long working hours with higher BMI.
  • A negative association was observed between high physical demand and BMI among men.
  • The connection between physical demand, long working hours, and BMI remained significant after controlling for job stress factors.

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