Women, work and stress
In: I. Evolahti, A., Hultcrantz, M., Collins, A. (2006). Women’s work stress and cortisol levels: A longitudinal study of the association between the psychosocial work environment and serum cortisol. Journal of Psychosomatic Research. 61: 645-652. ::doi::10.1016/j.jpsychores.2006.07.022 ::pmid::17084142 ::isi::000242010400009; II. Evolahti, A., Hultcrantz, M., Collins, A. (2009). Psychosocial work environment and lifestyle as related to lipid profiles in perimenopausal women. Climacteric. 12(2): 131-45. ::doi::10.1080/13697130802521290 ::pmid::19085562 ::isi::000263874700006; III. Evolahti, A., Hultell, D., Collins, A. Develoment of burnout in middle-aged women: A longitudinal study. [Submitted];; (2012)
Online
Hochschulschrift
Zugriff:
Work-related stress has become a major public health problem in Western societies. In Sweden women account for the majority of long-term sick leave and the most common reasons are psychiatric conditions such as depression and stress-related diagnoses. Stressful working conditions have been shown to influence both physical and psychological health by acting as important mediating factors in the development of e.g. cardiovascular and musculoskeletal disorders and symptoms of depression and anxiety. However, the majority of stress research has been conducted on men and the results concerning the association between work stress and psychophysiological stress responses in women are still contradictory. Thus, the results cannot automatically be generalized to women as women may experience different stressors, have different perceptions of stress and display different patterns of neuroendocrine reactivity to stress compared to men. Also, midlife has been shown to be a vulnerable phase of life for women entailing both biological and psychosocial changes. Studies of middle-aged women are scarce and there is a compelling need to elucidate the possible association between an adverse psychosocial work environment and stress-related conditions among women of this age group. The overall aim of the present thesis was to study both psychological and physiological effects of stress in middle-aged women focusing on the associations between the effects of adverse psychosocial work environment and physiological stress responses as measured by cortisol as well as lipid levels. A second aim was to study individual differences in a longitudinal perspective by identifying distinct developmental patterns of burnout among the women over a nine-year period. Study I showed that work-related demands and lack of social support were associated with high cortisol levels. High demands and low social support predicted high cortisol levels at baseline, but not on follow-up. Furthermore, the mean levels of cortisol were lower on follow-up and the ...
Titel: |
Women, work and stress
|
---|---|
Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: | Evolahti, Annika |
Link: | |
Quelle: | I. Evolahti, A., Hultcrantz, M., Collins, A. (2006). Women’s work stress and cortisol levels: A longitudinal study of the association between the psychosocial work environment and serum cortisol. Journal of Psychosomatic Research. 61: 645-652. ::doi::10.1016/j.jpsychores.2006.07.022 ::pmid::17084142 ::isi::000242010400009; II. Evolahti, A., Hultcrantz, M., Collins, A. (2009). Psychosocial work environment and lifestyle as related to lipid profiles in perimenopausal women. Climacteric. 12(2): 131-45. ::doi::10.1080/13697130802521290 ::pmid::19085562 ::isi::000263874700006; III. Evolahti, A., Hultell, D., Collins, A. Develoment of burnout in middle-aged women: A longitudinal study. [Submitted];; (2012) |
Veröffentlichung: | Inst för klinisk neurovetenskap / Dept of Clinical Neuroscience, 2012 |
Medientyp: | Hochschulschrift |
ISBN: | 978-91-7457-677-1 (print) ; 91-7457-677-1 (print) |
Sonstiges: |
|