132 results on '"A. Lamontagne"'
Search Results
2. Exploring the challenges and opportunities for improving the health and wellbeing of international students: Perspectives of professional staff at an Australian University
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Newton, Danielle C, Tomyn, Adrian J, and LaMontagne, Anthony D
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- 2021
3. Communication Challenges for People with Chronic Aphasia: A Systematic Qualitative Review of Barriers and Facilitators in Local Services.
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Poirier, Sarah-Ève, Voyer, Laurie-Anne, Poulin, Valérie, Lamontagne, Marie-Eve, and Monetta, Laura
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CHRONIC disease treatment ,RESEARCH funding ,SHOPPING ,CINAHL database ,CONTENT analysis ,APHASIA ,FOOD service ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,COMMUNICATION ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) - Abstract
Aphasia is an acquired communication disorder caused by a cerebral lesion, such as a stroke. People with aphasia can experience various difficulties that may involve speaking, listening, reading, or writing. These difficulties have multiple impacts on their expression of their needs, interests, and opinions. Accordingly, people with aphasia often encounter barriers and facilitators when using local services, which reduces their participation. For instance, grocery shopping or going to a coffee house can be challenging for them. Hence, this systematic review was conducted to synthetize the barriers and facilitators for people with aphasia when using local services. Following the Enhancing Transparency in Reporting the Synthesis of Qualitative Research guidelines, five databases and Google Scholar were searched for the literature published through April 2024. A total of nine studies were included in the present work. The results highlight that most of the barriers to communicational access to local services are environmental ones related to other people or society. A few environmental facilitators were mentioned, but these were mainly a reflection of the barriers. Personal facilitators were noted, but people with aphasia said that they were insufficient for counterbalancing environmental barriers. The results highlight the need to raise awareness of aphasia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Libraries and Literacy: Making It Work. An Annotated Bibliography
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Centre for Literacy of Quebec (Canada) and Lamontagne, Manon
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This bibliography was compiled for The Centre for Literacy's 2007 Summer Institute--"Libraries and Literacy: Making It Work." The literature represented here includes research studies, descriptive articles, guides and manuals. Selections address the principles, "best practices" and assessment of library involvement in literacy programs and describe the different forms such involvement takes--including programs run by libraries alone and collaborative programs that involve libraries and literacy providers. Some selections address the issues relating to adult literacy learners as library users, or potential library users. Each section has been arranged in alphabetical order. Although not exhaustive, the selected entries reflect the development of library-based literacy programs over the past decade and offer a set of essential readings on the issues and may serve as a basis for further research. The references include programs from Canada, as well as other English-speaking countries, notably the United States, Australia, and New Zealand. Research for this bibliography included searches of: the National Adult Literacy Database (NALD); the National Institute for Literacy (NIFL); the Literacy Information and Communication System (LINCS) database; National Center for the Study of Adult Learning and Literacy (NCSALL); the Education Resources Information Center [ERIC]; The Centre for Literacy resource collection; the Library and Information Sciences Abstracts [LISA]; and the websites of numerous national/international library associations. Further recommendations were contributed by participants at the Summer Institute. Search words used across platforms included: adult education, adult literacy, family literacy, public libraries, community libraries, library education.
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- 2007
5. Early childhood educator mental health : Performing the 'National Quality Standard'.
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Corr, Lara, Cook, Kay, LaMontagne, Anthony D., Davis, Elise, and Waters, Elizabeth
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- 2017
6. Associations between Australian early childhood educators' mental health and working conditions : A cross-sectional study.
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Corr, Lara, Cook, Kay, LaMontagne, Anthony D., Waters, Elizabeth, and Davis, Elise
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- 2015
7. Suicide among male road and rail drivers in Australia: A retrospective mortality study
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Milner, Allison, Page, Kathryn, and LaMontagne, Anthony D
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- 2015
8. Effectiveness of the Australian MATES in Construction Suicide Prevention Program: a systematic review.
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Gullestrup, Jorgen, King, Tania, Thomas, Samantha L, and LaMontagne, Anthony D
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WORK environment ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,STRATEGIC planning ,SUICIDE prevention ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PUBLIC health ,MENTAL health ,HUMAN services programs ,JOB involvement ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Suicide is a major public health issue globally. The World Health Organization has called for nations to create comprehensive national suicide prevention strategies including multisectoral collaboration, awareness raising, advocacy and capacity building. The workplace provides opportunity and structure for suicide prevention programs. However, many of these programs are poorly documented and evaluated. The MATES in Construction (MATES) program is a multimodal workplace-based suicide prevention program designed for and by the construction industry. This systematic review examined the available evidence for the effectiveness of the MATES program and is reported according to PRISMA guidelines. A literature search resulted in the inclusion of 12 peer-reviewed articles published between January 2010 and February 2023 containing primary data of evaluations of MATES. There was evidence of the effectiveness of the MATES program in improving mental health and suicide prevention literacy, helping intentions and reducing stigma. The results highlighted the importance of worker-to-worker peer approaches with workers consistently stating that supervisors were the least trusted resources for mental health and suicide concerns. Favourable results were found in relation to reduced suicide risk in the construction industry. The evidence base for MATES is limited in terms of causal inference with very few controlled evaluations and no experimental studies having been conducted to date. Improved understanding of how the program motivates volunteers, their experiences and research on the longer-term impacts of the program on the industry is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. A blended face-to-face and smartphone intervention to improve suicide prevention literacy and help-seeking intentions among construction workers: a randomised controlled trial.
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King, Tania L., Fleitas Alfonzo, Ludmila, Batterham, Philip, Mackinnon, Andrew, Lockwood, Chris, Harvey, Samuel, Kelly, Brian, Lingard, Helen, Cox, Laura, and LaMontagne, Tony D.
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SUICIDE prevention ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CONSTRUCTION workers ,HELP-seeking behavior ,CLINICAL trial registries ,SUICIDAL ideation - Abstract
Purpose: In Australia and elsewhere, suicide rates among construction workers remain high. Construction workplaces are thus an important setting for targeted suicide prevention programs. This study aimed to compare suicide prevention literacy and help-seeking intentions among participants receiving face-to-face suicide prevention training, with those receiving face-to-face training augmented by a smartphone application. Methods: A two-arm randomised controlled trial of a smartphone suicide prevention intervention was conducted among construction workers in four Australian states (trial registration number: ACTRN12619000625178). All participants received face-to-face training and were randomised to the control condition (face-to-face only, n = 575), or MATESmobile condition (face-to-face + smartphone application,n = 509). Surveys administered at baseline and 3-month follow-up measured suicide prevention literacy and help-seeking intentions for personal/emotional problems and suicidal thoughts. A mixed-model repeated measures (MMRM) analysis included all 1084 randomised participants. Results: Outcomes did not differ significantly for suicide prevention literacy, nor help-seeking intentions from formal sources, informal sources outside the workplace, or no one (did not intend to seek help from anyone). However, relative to those in the control condition, those in the MATESmobile group showed greater increase in help-seeking intentions for emotional problems from a MATES worker/Connector (mean difference 0.54, 95% CI 0.22–0.87) and help-seeking intentions for suicidal thoughts from a workmate (mean difference 0.47, 95% CI 0.10–0.83) or MATES worker/Connector (mean difference 0.47, 95% CI 0.09–0.85). Conclusion: Results indicate that the MATESmobile application, together with face-to-face training, is beneficial in enhancing help-seeking intentions from MATES workers/Connectors and workmates to a greater extent than face-to-face training only. While this research provides some evidence that smartphone applications may support suicide prevention training, further research is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Job Stress as a Preventable Upstream Determinant of Common Mental Disorders: A Review for Practitioners and Policy-makers
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LaMontagne, Anthony D, Keegel, Tessa, Louie, Amber M, and Ostry, Aleck
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- 2010
11. Mental health-related knowledge, attitudes and behaviours in a cross-sectional sample of australian university students: a comparison of domestic and international students.
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LaMontagne, Anthony D., Shann, Clare, Lolicato, Erin, Newton, Danielle, Owen, Patrick J, Tomyn, Adrian J., and Reavley, Nicola J.
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FOREIGN students , *COLLEGE students , *MENTAL health of students , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *DOMESTIC violence - Abstract
Background: There are growing concerns about the mental health of university students in Australia and internationally, with universities, governments and other stakeholders actively developing new policies and practices. Previous research suggests that many students experience poor mental health while at university, and that the risk may be heightened for international students. Mental health-related knowledge, attitudes and behaviours are modifiable determinants of mental health and thus suitable targets for intervention. This study assessed the mental health-related knowledge, stigmatising attitudes, helping behaviours, and self-reported experiences of mental health problems in the student population of a large multi-campus Australian university, and conducted a comparative assessment of international and domestic students. Methods: Participants were 883 international and 2,852 domestic students (overall response rate 7.1%) who completed an anonymous voluntary online survey that was sent to all enrolled students in July 2019 (n = ~ 52,341). Various measures of mental health-related knowledge, attitudes and helping behaviours were assessed. A comparative analysis of international and domestic students was conducted, including adjustment for age and sex. Results: Overall, there was evidence of improvements in mental health-related knowledge, attitudes and behaviours relative to previous studies, including higher depression recognition, intentions to seek help, and reported help-seeking behaviour. Comparative analysis indicated that international students scored predominantly lower on a range of indicators (e.g., depression recognition, awareness of evidence-based forms of help); however, differences were narrower difference between the two groups compared to what has been reported previously. Finally, some indicators were more favourable among international students, such as higher help-seeking intentions, and lower prevalence of self-reported mental health problems compared to domestic students. Conclusion: Though there were some important differences between domestic and international students in this study, differences were narrower than observed in previous studies. Study findings are informing the on-going implementation and refinement of this university's student mental health strategy, and may be used to inform evolving policy and practice in the university sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Research interrupted: applying the CONSERVE 2021 Statement to a randomized trial of rehabilitation during critical illness affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Reid, Julie C., Molloy, Alex, Strong, Geoff, Kelly, Laurel, O'Grady, Heather, Cook, Deborah, Archambault, Patrick M., Ball, Ian, Berney, Sue, Burns, Karen E. A., D'Aragon, Frederick, Duan, Erick, English, Shane W., Lamontagne, François, Pastva, Amy M., Rochwerg, Bram, Seely, Andrew J. E., Serri, Karim, Tsang, Jennifer L. Y., and Verceles, Avelino C.
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COVID-19 pandemic ,CRITICALLY ill ,INTENSIVE care units ,EXTENUATING circumstances - Abstract
Rationale: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted non-COVID critical care trials globally as intensive care units (ICUs) prioritized patient care and COVID-specific research. The international randomized controlled trial CYCLE (Critical Care Cycling to Improve Lower Extremity Strength) was forced to halt recruitment at all sites in March 2020, creating immediate challenges. We applied the CONSERVE (CONSORT and SPIRIT Extension for RCTs Revised in Extenuating Circumstance) statement as a framework to report the impact of the pandemic on CYCLE and describe our mitigation approaches.Methods: On March 23, 2020, the CYCLE Methods Centre distributed a standardized email to determine the number of patients still in-hospital and those requiring imminent 90-day endpoint assessments. We assessed protocol fidelity by documenting attempts to provide the in-hospital randomized intervention (cycling or routine physiotherapy) and collect the primary outcome (physical function 3-days post-ICU discharge) and 90-day outcomes. We advised sites to prioritize data for the study's primary outcome. We sought feedback on pandemic barriers related to trial procedures.Results: Our main Methods Centre mitigation strategies included identifying patients at risk for protocol deviations, communicating early and frequently with sites, developing standardized internal tools focused on high-risk points in the protocol for monitoring patient progress, data entry, and validation, and providing guidance to conduct some research activities remotely. For study sites, our strategies included determining how institutional pandemic research policies applied to CYCLE, communicating with the Methods Centre about capacity to continue any part of the research, and developing contingency plans to ensure the protocol was delivered as intended. From 15 active sites (12 Canada, 2 US, 1 Australia), 5 patients were still receiving the study intervention in ICUs, 6 required primary outcomes, and 17 required 90-day assessments. With these mitigation strategies, we attempted 100% of ICU interventions, 83% of primary outcomes, and 100% of 90-day assessments per our protocol.Conclusions: We retained all enrolled patients with minimal missing data using several time-sensitive strategies. Although CONSERVE recommends reporting only major modifications incurred by extenuating circumstances, we suggest that it also provides a helpful framework for reporting mitigation strategies with the goal of improving research transparency and trial management.Trial Registration: NCT03471247. Registered on March 20, 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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13. Can an online mental health training programme improve physician supervisors' behaviour towards trainees?
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Gayed, Aimee, Kugenthiran, Nathasha, LaMontagne, Anthony D., Christensen, Helen, Glozier, Nick, and Harvey, Samuel B.
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EDUCATION of physicians ,MENTAL illness prevention ,ONLINE education ,PILOT projects ,WORK environment ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,CONFIDENCE ,HEALTH facilities ,PROFESSIONS ,RESEARCH methodology ,SELF-evaluation ,CONVERSATION ,MENTAL health ,PEER relations ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,SOCIAL stigma ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,COMPARATIVE studies ,T-test (Statistics) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SUPERVISION of employees ,PHYSICIANS ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,BEHAVIOR modification - Abstract
Background: Physician trainees have elevated rates of psychological distress, mental disorders and suicide. Physician supervisors can support the mental health needs of trainees. Aims: To test the feasibility and acceptability of a tailored online mental health training programme and to ascertain the potential effectiveness of the programme to alter the confidence and behaviours of physician supervisors. Methods: Thirty Australian hospital‐based physicians who were supervising physician trainees participated in this quasi‐experimental pre–post pilot study. All received the intervention that comprised 12 5‐min modules to complete over a 3‐week period. Baseline and post‐intervention data were collected. The primary outcome evaluated participants' confidence to respond to trainees experiencing mental ill‐health and promote a mentally healthy workplace. Secondary outcomes evaluated change in self‐reported behaviour, mental health knowledge and stigmatising attitudes. Differences in mean scale scores for each outcome measure from baseline and post‐intervention were compared using paired sample t‐tests. Results: Thirty physicians completed the baseline assessment and 23 (76.7%) completed all programme modules. Most participants found the programme engaging, interesting and useful. Post‐intervention data, available for 25 (83.3%) participants, showed a significant increase in participants' knowledge of their role in supporting trainees under their supervision (P = 0.002), confidence to initiate conversations about mental health with staff (P < 0.001), and application of preventive and responsive supervisory behaviours to support the mental health needs of those they supervise (P < 0.001). Conclusions: This online mental health training programme for physician supervisors was feasible and associated with improved confidence and behaviour to support the mental health needs of trainees they supervised. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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14. Psychosocial and Other Working Conditions in Relation to Employment Arrangements in a Sample of Working Australians
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Louie, AM, Ostry, AS, Shoveller, J, Quinlan, M, Keegel, TG, Radi, S, and LaMontagne, AD
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- 2006
15. Changes in Job Security and Mental Health: An Analysis of 14 Annual Waves of an Australian Working-Population Panel Survey.
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LaMontagne, Anthony Daniel, Too, Lay San, Punnett, Laura, and Milner, Allison Joy
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CONFIDENCE intervals , *JOB security , *MENTAL health , *OCCUPATIONS , *REGRESSION analysis , *SELF-evaluation , *SEX distribution , *STATISTICAL models , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
We examined whether job security improvements were associated with improvements in mental health in a large, nationally representative panel study in Australia. We used both within-person fixed effects (FE) and random effects (RE) regression to analyze data from 14 annual waves covering the calendar period of 2002–2015 (19,169 persons; 106,942 observations). Mental Health Inventory–5 scores were modeled in relation to self-reported job security (categorical, quintiles), adjusting for age, year, education, and job change in the past year. Both FE and RE models showed stepwise improvements in Mental Health Inventory–5 scores with improving job security, with stronger exposure-outcome relationships in the RE models and for men compared with women. The RE coefficients for improvements in job security in men were 2.06 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.67, 2.46) for 1 quintile, steadily increasing for 2- (3.94 (95% CI: 3.54, 4.34)), 3- (5.82 (95% CI: 5.40, 6.24)), and 4-quintile (7.18 (95% CI: 6.71, 7.64)) improvements. The FE model for men produced slightly smaller coefficients, reaching a maximum of 5.55 (95% CI: 5.06, 6.05). This analysis, with improved causal inference over previous observational research, showed that improving job security is strongly associated with decreasing depression and anxiety symptoms. Policy and practice intervention to improve job security could benefit population mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Prevalence and predictors of suicidal thoughts and behaviours among Australian police and emergency services employees.
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Kyron, Michael J., Rikkers, Wavne, Page, Andrew C., O'Brien, Patrice, Bartlett, Jennifer, LaMontagne, Anthony, and David, Lawrence
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MENTAL depression ,MENTAL health ,POLICE ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL stigma ,SUICIDAL behavior ,SURVEYS ,WORK environment ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIAL support ,WELL-being ,SUICIDAL ideation - Abstract
Objective: This study presents rates of suicide thoughts and behaviours of police and emergency services personnel around Australia. In addition, it examines personal (i.e. mental health, substance use) and working environment risk and protective factors. Method: A stratified random sample of personnel from 33 Australian emergency services organisations were invited to participate in a mental health and wellbeing survey. In total, 14,868 Australian ambulance, fire and rescue, police and state emergency services employees participated and self-reported any suicidal thoughts, plans and/or attempts in the 12 months prior to the survey or at any stage in their life. Logistic regressions assessed factors associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviours. Results: Employees reported notably higher rates of suicidal thoughts and plans than the general Australian adult population, but not attempts. Male, single/divorced, non-heterosexual or longer-serving employees reported higher rates of suicidal thoughts and behaviours across each sector. Perceptions of stigma regarding mental health conditions from others in the workplace, negative impact of work on one's private life and low meaning of work were associated with suicidal thoughts, while bullying significantly differentiated who planned and attempted suicide from those who reported suicidal thoughts only. Higher resilience and social support were associated with lower suicidal thoughts, while intermittent explosive anger and illegal drug use were associated with higher rates of suicidal thoughts. Post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms significantly differentiated who planned suicide, while misuse of prescription drugs and psychological distress differentiated who attempted suicide from those who only reported suicidal thoughts. Conclusion: Amid inherently stressful occupations, it is important that workplaces function in a way that supports their personnel. Access to mental health services should be promoted and readily available to personnel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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17. Exploring the Challenges and Opportunities for Improving the Health and Wellbeing of International Students: Perspectives of Professional Staff at an Australian University.
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Newton, Danielle C., Tomyn, Adrian J., and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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PROFESSIONAL staff of universities & colleges ,STUDENT attitudes ,FOREIGN students ,STUDENT health ,WORLD health - Abstract
There are growing concerns about the mental health of university students, with particular concerns for international students studying in countries with different language and culture from the country of origin. We sought to explore the challenges and opportunities for supporting and improving the health and wellbeing of international students through interviews with health and other support services staff at an Australian University. Semi-structured interviews with a range of health and support services staff were conducted in person or by telephone in late 2018. Staff were asked about their perceptions of 1) health and wellbeing issues for international students, 2) barriers to international students accessing campus-based services for health and wellbeing concerns, and 3) strategies to improve international students' health and wellbeing. Transcribed interviews were analysed thematically. Mental health/illness was identified as the most important health and wellbeing concern for international students. Barriers to help-seeking included fear of repercussions for coming forward, lack of problem and symptom recognition, poor understanding of health information, cultural stigma associated with counselling and language barriers. A tendency among international students to delay help-seeking until problems reached crisis-point was also identified as a concern. Suggested strategies to improve wellbeing included pre-departure education/orientation to life in Australia, the integration of health and wellbeing education with other university programs, education about confidentiality, better supporting students in how to access services, and skill building to promote social connection. Addressing the identified issues and opportunities would support international student health and wellbeing and may assist in attracting international students back to Australia post-COVID. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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18. Psychosocial job characteristics and mental health: Do associations differ by migrant status in an Australian working population sample?
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Liu, Xiaomin, Bowe, Steven J., Li, Lin, Too, Lay San, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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JOB descriptions ,AUSTRALIANS ,MENTAL health ,OCCUPATIONAL hazards ,JOB stress ,JOB security ,MIGRANT labor - Abstract
Migrant workers may experience higher burdens of occupational injury and illness compared to native-born workers, which may be due to the differential exposure to occupational hazards, differential vulnerability to exposure-associated health impacts, or both. This study aims to assess if the relationships between psychosocial job characteristics and mental health vary by migrant status in Australia (differential vulnerability). A total of 8969 persons from wave 14 (2014–2015) of the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey were included in the analysis. Psychosocial job characteristics included skill discretion, decision authority and job insecurity. Mental health was assessed via a Mental Health Inventory-5 score (MHI-5), with a higher score indicating better mental health. Migrant status was defined by (i) country of birth (COB), (ii) the combination of COB and English/Non-English dominant language of COB and (iii) the combination of COB and years since arrival in Australia. Data were analysed using linear regression, adjusting for gender, age and educational attainment. Migrant status was analysed as an effect modifier of the relationships between psychosocial job characteristics and mental health. Skill discretion and decision authority were positively associated with the MHI-5 score while job insecurity was negatively associated with the MHI-5 score. We found no statistical evidence of migrant status acting as an effect modifier of the psychosocial job characteristic―MHI-5 relationships. With respect to psychosocial job characteristic―mental health relationships, these results suggest that differential exposure to job stressors is a more important mechanism than differential vulnerability for generating occupational health inequities between migrants and native-born workers in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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19. The relationship between an electronic mental health stigma campaign and suicidal thoughts and behaviours: a two-arm randomized controlled trial in the Australian construction industry.
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Milner, A, Aitken, Z, Law, P C F, LaMontagne, A D, Mann, C, Cooper, T, and Witt, K
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BEHAVIOR ,COMMUNICATION ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MENTAL health services ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SOCIAL stigma ,TECHNOLOGY ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,SUICIDAL ideation ,HUMAN services programs ,PRE-tests & post-tests - Abstract
Males employed in the construction industry are at greater risk of suicide than other employed males. It is plausible that a high level of stigma against mental health problems explains the elevated rates of suicide among this group. This study sought to test the effectiveness of an electronic mental health stigma intervention on suicide ideation, communication about suicide and attempts. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either a series of brief contact interventions over a 6-week period or a wait list control. Suicidal ideation, communication about suicide and suicide attempts were assessed using the Suicidal Behaviors Questionnaire-Revised at post-intervention. We used linear regression to assess effectiveness at post-intervention, adjusting for relevant covariates using both conventional methods and a propensity score approach. Results indicate that the intervention had no significant impact on suicidal thoughts, communication or suicide attempts. There was some indication that individuals in the intervention group reported a slight increase in attempts and communication about suicide. These observations underscore an urgent need for more research to understand the complex and nuanced relationship between stigma and suicide in non-clinical populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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20. Estimating lost productivity costs from poor psychological health in the workplace
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McTernan,, Dollard,, and LaMontagne,
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- 2014
21. Does social support modify the effect of disability acquisition on mental health? A longitudinal study of Australian adults.
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Aitken, Zoe, Krnjacki, Lauren, Kavanagh, Anne, LaMontagne, Anthony, Milner, Allison, Kavanagh, Anne Marie, and LaMontagne, Anthony Daniel
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SOCIAL support ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,AUSTRALIANS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MENTAL health surveys ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MENTAL illness prevention ,PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,PSYCHOLOGY of People with disabilities ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Purpose: Disability acquisition in adulthood is associated with deterioration in mental health. Social support may act as a "buffer" against poor mental health following disability acquisition. We tested the hypothesis that women and men with low social support experienced larger declines in mental health on acquisition of a disability compared to women and men with high social support.Methods: We assessed whether social support, measured both prior and subsequent to disability acquisition, modified the association between disability acquisition and mental health using 14 annual waves of data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey. Participants reported at least two consecutive waves of disability preceded by at least two consecutive waves without disability (2200 participants, 15,724 observations). Fixed-effects linear regression models were used to estimate average differences in mental health between waves with and without disability, for women and men separately. We tested for effect measure modification of the association by social support, including a three-way interaction between disability and social support prior and subsequent to disability acquisition.Results: Though the effects of disability acquisition on mental health were much larger for women, for both women and men there was a consistent pattern of association with social support. There was evidence that social support modified the association between disability acquisition and mental health, with the largest effects for those experiencing a change from high to low social support subsequent to disability and for people with consistently low social support.Conclusions: These findings highlight the importance of developing new policy and practice strategies to improve the mental health of people with disabilities, including interventions to promote social support at the time of disability acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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22. Differential Exposure to Job Stressors: A Comparative Analysis Between Migrant and Australia-Born Workers.
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Liu, Xiaomin, Bowe, Steven J, Milner, Allison, Li, Lin, Too, Lay San, and Lamontagne, Anthony D
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CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,INTERVIEWING ,JOB stress ,MIGRANT labor ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aims Previous studies have suggested that migrants have higher exposures to psychosocial job stressors than native-born workers. We explored migrant status-related differences in skill discretion/job complexity and decision authority, and whether the differences varied by gender, age, and educational attainment. Methods Data were from Wave 14 of the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey. A total number of 9031 persons were included in the analysis. Outcomes included skill discretion/job complexity and decision authority. Exposure included migrant status defined by (i) country of birth (COB), (ii) the combination of COB and English/Non-English dominant language of COB, and (iii) the combination of COB and years since arrival in Australia. Data were analysed using linear regression, adjusting for gender, age, and educational attainment. These covariates were also analysed as effect modifiers of the relationship between migrant status and job stressor exposure. Results In the unadjusted analysis, only migrant workers from Non-English-speaking countries (Non-ESC-born) had significantly lower skill discretion and job complexity than Australia-born workers (−0.29, 95% CI: −0.56; −0.01); however, results from fully adjusted models showed that all migrant groups, except migrant workers from Main-English-speaking countries, had significantly lower skill discretion and job complexity than Australia-born workers (overseas-born workers, −0.59, 95% CI: −0.79; −0.38; Non-ESC-born, −1.01, 95% CI: −1.27; −0.75; migrant workers who had arrived ≤5 years ago, −1.33, 95% CI: −1.94; −0.72; arrived 6–10 years ago, −0.92, 95% CI: −1.46; −0.39; and arrived ≥11 years ago, −0.45, 95% CI: −0.67; −0.22). On the contrary, the unadjusted model showed that migrant workers had higher decision authority than Australia-born workers, whereas in the fully adjusted model, no difference in decision authority was found between migrant workers and Australia-born workers. Effect modification results showed that as educational attainment increased, differences in skill discretion and job complexity between Australia-born workers and Non-ESC-born migrants progressively increased; whereas Non-ESC-born migrants with postgraduate degree showed significantly lower decision authority than Australia-born workers. Conclusions This study suggests that skill discretion and job complexity but not decision authority is associated with migrant status. Migrants with high educational attainment from Non-English-speaking countries appear to be most affected by lower skill discretion/job complexity and decision authority; however, differences in skill discretion and job complexity attenuate over time for Non-ESC-born migrants, consistent with an acculturation effect. Low skill discretion and job complexity, to the extent that it overlaps with underemployment, may adversely affect migrant workers' well-being. Targeted language skill support could facilitate migrant integration into the Australian labour market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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23. Body mass index and psychosocial job quality: An analysis of working Australians from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey.
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Taouk, Yamna, Milner, Allison, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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JOB analysis ,QUALITY of work life ,BODY mass index ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
The study investigated the association between psychosocial job quality and body mass index (BMI) by sex. Regression models examining potential differences in the job stressor-BMI relationship between men and women were conducted using longitudinal data from working Australians and a psychosocial job stressor index. There was strong evidence of an association between psychosocial job stressors and BMI for females but not males. Compared with no psychosocial job stressors, 1 adversity was associated with 0.13 kg/m2 (95% CI: −0.42–0.67); 2 adversities were associated with 0.53 kg/m2 (−0.00–1.07); and 3 or more adversities were associated with 0.87 kg/m2 (0.30–1.45) increase in mean BMI for females. Females were found to have on average 0.32 kg/m2 (0.16–0.49) increase in BMI per increase in psychosocial job stressor. Psychosocial job stressors appear to have an adverse effect on women's weight. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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24. Depression literacy and help-seeking in Australian police.
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Reavley, Nicola J., Milner, Allison J., Martin, Angela, Too, Lay San, Papas, Alicia, Witt, Katrina, Keegel, Tessa, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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MENTAL illness treatment ,CONFIDENCE ,MENTAL depression ,EMPLOYMENT ,HEALTH attitudes ,HELP-seeking behavior ,INTENTION ,LITERACY ,RESEARCH methodology ,CASE studies ,MENTAL health ,GENERAL practitioners ,POLICE psychology ,PROFESSIONAL ethics ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,RECOGNITION (Psychology) ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SOCIAL stigma ,SURVEYS ,WORK environment ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,AFFINITY groups ,SOCIAL boundaries ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,HEALTH literacy ,LEADERS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: To assess depression literacy, help-seeking and help-offering to others in members of the police force in the state of Victoria, Australia. Methods: All staff in police stations involved in a cluster randomised controlled trial of an integrated workplace mental health intervention were invited to participate. Survey questions covered sociodemographic and employment information, recognition of depression in a vignette, stigma, treatment beliefs, willingness to assist co-workers with mental health problems, help-giving and help-seeking behaviours, and intentions to seek help. Using the baseline dataset associated with the trial, the paper presents a descriptive analysis of mental health literacy and helping behaviours, comparing police station leaders and lower ranks. Results: Respondents were 806 staff, comprising 618 lower-ranked staff and 188 leaders. Almost 84% of respondents were able to correctly label the problem described in the vignette. Among those who had helped someone with a mental health problem, both lower ranks and leaders most commonly reported ‘talking to the person’ although leaders were more likely to facilitate professional help. Leaders’ willingness to assist the person and confidence in doing so was very high, and over 80% of leaders appropriately rated police psychologists, general practitioners, psychologists, talking to a peer and contacting welfare as helpful. However, among both leaders and lower ranks with mental health problems, the proportion of those unlikely to seek professional help was greater than those who were likely to seek it. Conclusion: Knowledge about evidence-based interventions for depression was lower in this police sample than surveys in the general population, pointing to the need for education and training to improve mental health literacy. Such education should also aim to overcome barriers to professional help-seeking. Interventions that aim to improve mental health literacy and help-seeking behaviour appear to be suitable targets for better protecting police member mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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25. Job Stressors and Employment Precarity as Risks for Thoughts About Suicide: An Australian Study Using the Ten to Men Cohort.
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Milner, Allison, LaMontagne, Anthony D, Spittal, Matthew J, Pirkis, Jane, and Currier, Dianne
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- *
CONFIDENCE intervals , *JOB security , *JOB stress , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SUICIDAL ideation , *CROSS-sectional method , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
Aims Past research suggests that adverse experiences at work (such as job stressors and precarious employment) are associated with thoughts about suicide, especially among males. A limitation of this research is that it is largely cross-sectional. Thus, it is unknown whether job stressors are a prior cause of thoughts about suicide. This study examined the baseline association between adverse experiences at work and thoughts about suicide at follow-up in a large nationally representative cohort of employed men. Methods We used data from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health (Ten to Men). The outcome was thoughts about suicide in the prior 12 months (reported in wave 2) and the key exposure variables were: high job demands, low job control, job insecurity, perceived unfairness of pay, occupational skill level, and employment arrangement (all reported in wave 1). We adjusted for possible confounders, including mental health and suicidal thoughts (wave 1). Results In a sample of 8379 and after adjustment, job insecurity (OR 1.35, 95% CI 1.13–1.61, P = 0.001), low job control (OR 1.19, 95% CI 1.06–1.33, P = 0.004), and employment on a casual or on a fixed term basis (OR 1.30, 95% 1.01–1.67, P = 0.041) were associated with a greater odds of thoughts about suicide at follow up. Results for all by job control were maintained after removing those who reported thoughts of suicide at baseline. Conclusion This study suggests that experiences at work may be risk factors for thoughts about suicide among employed men. More research is needed to unpack the complex associations between, employment, and experiences of suicide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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26. Underemployment and its impacts on mental health among those with disabilities: evidence from the HILDA cohort.
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Milner, Allison, King, Tania Louise, LaMontagne, Anthony D., Aitken, Zoe, Petrie, Dennis, and Kavanagh, Anne M.
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EMPLOYMENT of people with disabilities ,PART-time employment ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MENTAL health ,PROBABILITY theory ,TIME ,SECONDARY analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGY - Published
- 2017
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27. Time Spent Commuting to Work and Mental Health: Evidence From 13 Waves of an Australian Cohort Study.
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Milner, Allison, Badland, Hannah, Kavanagh, Anne, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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CONFIDENCE intervals ,MENTAL health ,OCCUPATIONS ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,TIME ,TRANSPORTATION ,WORK ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Time-related stressors, such as long working hours, are recognized as being detrimental to health. We considered whether time spent commuting to work was a risk factor for poor mental health. Data from the Household, Income Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey were used to conduct fixed-effects longitudinal regression analyses. The outcome variable was the Mental Health Inventory, and the main exposure represented hours per week traveling to and from a place of paid employment. Effect modifiers included sex, low job control, high demands, and low job security. Compared with when a person commuted for ≤2 hours per week, there was a small decline (coefficient = -0.33, 95% CI: -0.62, -0.04; P = 0.025) in the Mental Health Inventory score when they commuted for over 6 hours per week. Compared with persons with high job control, persons working in jobs with low job control experienced significantly greater declines in the Mental Health Inventory score when commuting 4 to 6 hours per week and when commuting over 6 hours per week. We found no influence from the other hypothesized effect modifiers. These results suggest the importance of considering commuting time as an additional work-related time stressor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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28. The relationship between working conditions and self-rated health among medical doctors: evidence from seven waves of the Medicine In Australia Balancing Employment and Life (Mabel) survey.
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Milner, Allison, Witt, Katrina, Spittal, Matthew J., Bismark, Marie, Graham, Melissa, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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JOB stress ,PSYCHOLOGY of physicians ,PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being ,PHYSICIANS ,WORK-life balance - Abstract
Background: Psychosocial job stressors, such as low control and high demands, have been found to influence the health and wellbeing of doctors. However, past research in this area has relied on cross-sectional data, which limits causal inferences about the influence of psychosocial job stressors on health. In this study, we examine this relationship longitudinally while also assessing whether the relationship between psychosocial job stressors and health is modified by gender.Methods: The data source was seven annual waves of the Medicine in Australia: Balancing Employment and Life (MABEL) survey. The outcome was self-rated health (measured using the SF-12), and key exposures reflected job control, job demands, work-life balance variables, employment arrangements, and aggression experienced at work. We used longitudinal fixed and random effects regression models to assess within and between-person changes in health.Results: Excessive job demands, low job control, feelings of not being rewarded at work, and work-life imbalance were associated with higher within-person odds of poorer self-rated health. Gender differences were apparent. For female doctors, work arrangements and work-life imbalance were associated with poorer self-rated health whilst task-based job stressors were associated with poorer self-rated health in male doctors.Conclusions: These results suggest the importance of addressing adverse working environments among doctors.Trial Registration: Not applicable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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29. The work-based predictors of job engagement and job satisfaction experienced by community health professionals.
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Noblet, Andrew J., Allisey, Amanda F., Nielsen, Ingrid L., Cotton, Stacey, LaMontagne, Anthony D., and Page, Kathryn M.
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MEDICAL personnel ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,COMMUNITY health services ,STATISTICAL correlation ,JOB satisfaction ,JOB stress ,MANAGEMENT ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,WORK environment ,WORLD Wide Web ,THEORY ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,PREDICTIVE tests ,WORK experience (Employment) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Job engagement represents a critical resource for community-based health care agencies to achieve high levels of effectiveness. However, studies examining the organizational sources of job engagement among health care professionals have generally overlooked those workers based in community settings. Purpose: This study drew on the demand-control model, in addition to stressors that are more specific to community health services (e.g., unrewarding management practices), to identify conditions that are closely associated with the engagement experienced by a community health workforce. Job satisfaction was also included as a way of assessing how the predictors of job engagement differ from those associated with other job attitudes. Methodology/Approach: Health and allied health care professionals (n = 516) from two Australian community health services took part in the current investigation. Responses from the two organizations were pooled and analyzed using linear multiple regression. Findings: The analyses revealed that three working conditions were predictive of both job engagement and job satisfaction (i.e., job control, quantitative demands, and unrewarding management practices). There was some evidence of differential effects with cognitive demands being associated with job engagement, but not job satisfaction. Practice Implications: The results provide important insights into the working conditions that, if addressed, could play key roles in building a more engaged and satisfied community health workforce. Furthermore, working conditions like job control and management practices are amenable to change and thus represent important areas where community health services could enhance the energetic and motivational resources of their employees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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30. Male suicide among construction workers in Australia: a qualitative analysis of the major stressors precipitating death.
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Milner, Allison, Maheen, Humaira, Currier, Dianne, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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SUICIDE risk factors ,SUICIDE ,CONSTRUCTION workers ,JOB stress ,CONSTRUCTION industry statistics ,WORK environment & psychology ,CHRONIC diseases ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,WOUNDS & injuries ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
Background: Suicide rates among those employed in male-dominated professions such as construction are elevated compared to other occupational groups. Thus far, past research has been mainly quantitative and has been unable to identify the complex range of risk and protective factors that surround these suicides.Methods: We used a national coronial database to qualitatively study work and non-work related influences on male suicide occurring in construction workers in Australia. We randomly selected 34 cases according to specific sampling framework. Thematic analysis was used to develop a coding structure on the basis of pre-existing theories in job stress research.Results: The following themes were established on the basis of mutual consensus: mental health issues prior to death, transient working experiences (i.e., the inability to obtain steady employment), workplace injury and chronic illness, work colleagues as a source of social support, financial and legal problems, relationship breakdown and child custody issues, and substance abuse.Conclusion: Work and non-work factors were often interrelated pressures prior to death. Suicide prevention for construction workers needs to take a systematic approach, addressing work-level factors as well as helping those at-risk of suicide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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31. Suicide among emergency and protective service workers: A retrospective mortality study in Australia, 2001 to 2012.
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Milner, A., Witt, K., Maheen, H., and LaMontagne, A. D.
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CONFIDENCE intervals ,EMERGENCY medical technicians ,FIRE fighters ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,JOB stress ,POLICE ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL services ,SUICIDE ,ACQUISITION of data ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL coding - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergency and protective services personnel (e.g., police, ambulance, fire-fighters, defence, prison and security officers) report elevated levels of job stress and health problems. While population-level research is lacking, there has been some research suggesting suicide rates may be elevated in emergency and protective services. OBJECTIVES: This paper compares suicide rates between emergency and protective services occupational groups over a 12-year period (2001-2012) in Australia. METHOD: Labour force data was obtained from the 2006 Australian Census. Suicide data was obtained from the National Coroners Information System (NCIS). Negative binomial regression was used to estimate the association between suicide and employment as an emergency or protective service worker (including prison and security officers) over the period 2001-2012, as compared to all other occupations. Information on suicide method was extracted from the NCIS. RESULTS: The age-adjusted suicide rate across all emergency and protective service workers was 22.4 (95% CI 19.5 to 25.2) per 100,000 in males and 7.8 in females (95% CI 4.6 to 11.00), compared to 15.5 per 100,000 (95% CI 15.2 to 15.9) for males and 3.4 (95% CI 3.2 to 3.6) for females in other occupations. The highest risk by subgroup was observed among those employed in the defence force, prison officers, and ambulance personnel. The major method of death for all occupational groups was hanging. CONCLUSIONS: Our results clearly highlight the need for suicide prevention among emergency and protective service occupations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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32. Psychosocial job quality, mental health, and subjective wellbeing: a cross-sectional analysis of the baseline wave of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health.
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LaMontagne, Anthony D., Milner, Allison, Krnjacki, Lauren, Schlichthorst, Marisa, Kavanagh, Anne, Page, Kathryn, and Pirkis, Jane
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- *
QUALITY of work life , *WORK-life balance , *JOB satisfaction , *MEN'S mental health , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *UNEMPLOYMENT & psychology , *EMPLOYMENT , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEN'S health , *MENTAL health , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *POWER (Social sciences) , *QUALITY of life , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL justice , *WORK , *EMPLOYEES' workload , *EVALUATION research , *CROSS-sectional method , *PSYCHOLOGY ,WORK & psychology - Abstract
Background: Employment status and working conditions are strong determinants of male health, and are therefore an important focus in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health (Ten to Men). In this paper, we describe key work variables included in Ten to Men, and present analyses relating psychosocial job quality to mental health and subjective wellbeing at baseline.Methods: A national sample of males aged 10 to 55 years residing in private dwellings was drawn using a stratified multi-stage cluster random sample design. Data were collected between October 2013 and July 2014 for a cohort of 15,988 males, representing a response fraction of 35 %. This analysis was restricted to 18-55 year old working age participants (n = 13,456). Work-related measures included employment status, and, for those who were employed, a number of working conditions including an ordinal scale of psychosocial job quality (presence of low job control, high demand and complexity, high job insecurity, and low fairness of pay), and working time-related stressors such as long working hours and night shift work. Associations between psychosocial job quality and two outcome measures, mental ill-health and subjective wellbeing, were assessed using multiple linear regression.Results: The majority of participants aged 18-55 years were employed at baseline (85.6 %), with 8.4 % unemployed and looking for work, and 6.1 % not in the labour force. Among employed participants, there was a high prevalence of long working hours (49.9 % reported working more than 40 h/week) and night shift work (23.4 %). Psychosocial job quality (exposure to 0/1/2/3+ job stressors) prevalence was 36 %/ 37 %/ 20 %/ and 7 % of the working respondents. There was a dose-response relationship between psychosocial job quality and each of the two outcome measures of mental health and subjective wellbeing after adjusting for potential confounders, with higher magnitude associations between psychosocial job quality and subjective wellbeing.Conclusions: These results extend the study of psychosocial job quality to demonstrate associations with a global measure of subjective wellbeing. Ten to Men represents a valuable new resource for the longitudinal and life course study of work and health in the Australian male population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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33. Inequalities in socio-economic characteristics and health and wellbeing of men with and without disabilities: a cross-sectional analysis of the baseline wave of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health.
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Kavanagh, Anne M., Aitken, Zoe, Emerson, Eric, Sahabandu, Sash, Milner, Allison, Bentley, Rebecca, LaMontagne, Anthony D., Pirkis, Jane, and Studdert, David
- Subjects
MEN with disabilities ,DISEASES in men ,LONGITUDINAL method ,DEMOGRAPHIC surveys ,MEN'S health ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOUSING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,POVERTY ,RESEARCH ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EVALUATION research ,HEALTH equity ,AT-risk people ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: Internationally, men with disabilities have higher rates of social and economic disadvantage and poorer health and wellbeing than men without disabilities. No single study has provided comprehensive, population-level information about the magnitude of such differences among adult men using a well-validated instrument to measure disability.Methods: We analysed baseline data from Ten to Men - an Australian longitudinal study of male health. Ten to Men used a stratified multi-stage cluster random sample design to recruit a national sample of males aged 10 to 55 years residing in private dwellings. Data were collected between October 2013 and July 2014 from 15,988 males. This analysis was restricted to 18-55 year old participants with data available on age and disability (n = 13,569). We compared the demographic, socio-economic characteristics and health and wellbeing of men with and without disabilities using chi squared tests for proportions and t tests for continuous variables. Linear regression adjusted for age was used to assess the association between disability status and health and wellbeing, which were measured using the SF-12 mental and physical health component scores and the Personal Wellbeing Index.Results: Men with disabilities were older and more likely to be born in Australia, speak English at home, be Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and were less likely to be married or de facto, or to live in urban areas. They were less likely to have completed secondary school, be employed and live in affordable housing, and were more likely to live on low incomes, in more socio-economically disadvantaged areas, and in rental accommodation and to experience shortages of money. Among employed men, those with disabilities were less likely to be in high skilled jobs, worked less hours on average, and were more likely to report that they would prefer to work more. Men with disabilities had lower levels of social support and community participation and poorer mental and physical health and overall wellbeing.Conclusion: Adult men with disabilities experience marked social and economic disadvantage and poorer health and wellbeing. Improving the health and wellbeing of disabled men should be a priority for public health researchers and policy-makers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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34. The Australian longitudinal study on male health-methods.
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Currier, Dianne, Pirkis, Jane, Carlin, John, Degenhardt, Louisa, Dharmage, Shyamali C., Giles-Corti, Billie, Gordon, Ian, Gurrin, Lyle, Hocking, Jane, Kavanagh, Anne, Keogh, Louise A., Koelmeyer, Rachel, LaMontagne, Anthony D., Schlichthorst, Marisa, Patton, George, Sanci, Lena, Spittal, Matthew J., Studdert, David M., Williams, Joanne, and English, Dallas R.
- Subjects
MEN'S health ,DISEASES in men ,YOUNG men ,HEALTH surveys ,LONGITUDINAL method ,COMPARATIVE studies ,FAMILIES ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH status indicators ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MENTAL health ,RESEARCH ,RURAL population ,EVALUATION research ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,HEALTH & social status - Abstract
Background: The Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health (Ten to Men) was established in 2011 to build the evidence base on male health to inform policy and program development.Methods: Ten to Men is a national longitudinal study with a stratified multi-stage cluster random sample design and oversampling in rural and regional areas. Household recruitment was conducted from October 2013 to July 2014. Males who were aged 10 to 55 years residing in private dwellings were eligible to participate. Data were collected via self-completion paper questionnaires (participants aged 15 to 55) and by computer-assisted personal interview (boys aged 10 to 14). Household and proxy health data for boys were collected from a parent via a self-completion paper-based questionnaire. Questions covered socio-demographics, health status, mental health and wellbeing, health behaviours, social determinants, and health knowledge and service use.Results: A cohort of 15,988 males aged between 10 and 55 years was recruited representing a response fraction of 35 %.Conclusion: Ten to Men is a unique resource for investigating male health and wellbeing. Wave 1 data are available for approved research projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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35. Feasibility and acceptability of reducing workplace sitting time: a qualitative study with Australian office workers.
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Hadgraft, Nyssa T., Brakenridge, Charlotte L., LaMontagne, Anthony D., Fjeldsoe, Brianna S., Lynch, Brigid M., Dunstan, David W., Owen, Neville, Healy, Genevieve N., and Lawler, Sheleigh P.
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL diseases ,SOCIAL context ,FEASIBILITY studies ,QUALITATIVE research ,WORK & psychology ,WORK environment & psychology ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COMPUTERS ,CORPORATE culture ,HEALTH attitudes ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,POSTURE ,RESEARCH ,WORK ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,PILOT projects ,EVALUATION research ,SEDENTARY lifestyles - Abstract
Background: Office workers spend a large proportion of their working hours sitting. This may contribute to an increased risk of chronic disease and premature mortality. While there is growing interest in workplace interventions targeting prolonged sitting, few qualitative studies have explored workers' perceptions of reducing occupational sitting outside of an intervention context. This study explored barriers to reducing office workplace sitting, and the feasibility and acceptability of strategies targeting prolonged sitting in this context.Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a convenience sample of 20 office workers (50 % women), including employees and managers, in Melbourne, Australia. The three organisations (two large, and one small organisation) were from retail, health and IT industries and had not implemented any formalised approaches to sitting reduction. Questions covered barriers to reducing sitting, the feasibility of potential strategies aimed at reducing sitting, and perceived effects on productivity. Interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. Data were analysed using thematic analysis.Results: Participants reported spending most (median: 7.2 h) of their working hours sitting. The nature of computer-based work and exposure to furniture designed for a seated posture were considered to be the main factors influencing sitting time. Low cost strategies, such as standing meetings and in-person communication, were identified as feasible ways to reduce sitting time and were also perceived to have potential productivity benefits. However, social norms around appropriate workplace behaviour and workload pressures were perceived to be barriers to uptake of these strategies. The cost implications of height-adjustable workstations influenced perceptions of feasibility. Managers noted the need for an evidence-based business case supporting action on prolonged sitting, particularly in the context of limited resources and competing workplace health priorities.Conclusions: While a number of low-cost approaches to reduce workplace sitting are perceived to be feasible and acceptable in the office workplace, factors such as work demands and the organisational social context may still act as barriers to greater uptake. Building a supportive organisational culture and raising awareness of the adverse health effects of prolonged sitting may be important for improving individual-level and organisational-level motivation for change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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36. Perception of Mattering and Suicide Ideation in the Australian Working Population: Evidence from a Cross-Sectional Survey.
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Milner, A., Page, K., and LaMontagne, A.
- Subjects
SUICIDE prevention ,SUICIDE risk factors ,WELL-being ,SUICIDAL ideation ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Thoughts about suicide are a risk factor for suicide deaths and attempts and are associated with a range of mental health outcomes. While there is considerable knowledge about risk factors for suicide ideation, there is little known about protective factors. The current study sought to understand the role of perceived mattering to others as a protective factor for suicide in a working sample of Australians using a cross-sectional research design. Logistic regression analysis indicated that people with a higher perception that they mattered had lower odds of suicide ideation than those with lower reported mattering, after controlling for psychological distress, demographic and relationship variables. These results indicate the importance of further research and intervention studies on mattering as a lever for reducing suicidality. Understanding more about protective factors for suicide ideation is important as this may prevent future adverse mental health and behavioural outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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37. Neoliberalism, economic restructuring and policy change: Precarious housing and precarious employment in Australia.
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Beer, Andrew, Bentley, Rebecca, Baker, Emma, Mason, Kate, Mallett, Shelley, Kavanagh, Anne, and LaMontagne, Tony
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DWELLINGS ,NEOLIBERALISM ,ECONOMIC policy ,EMPLOYMENT ,AUSTRALIAN economy ,LABOR supply - Abstract
Housing, employment and economic conditions in many nations have changed greatly over the past decades. This paper explores the ways in which changing housing markets, economic conditions and government policies have affected vulnerable individuals and households, using Australia as a case study. The paper finds a substantial number and proportion of low income Australians have been affected by housing and employment that is insecure with profound implications for vulnerability. Importantly, the paper suggests that in Australia the economic gains achieved as a consequence of mining-related growth in the early 2000s were translated as greater employment security for some on low incomes, but not all. Enhanced access to employment in this period was differentiated by gender, with women largely missing out on the growth in jobs. For the population as a whole, employment gains were offset by increased housing insecurity as accommodation costs rose. The paper finds low income lone parents were especially vulnerable because they were unable to benefit from a buoyant labour market over the decade 2000–2010. They were also adversely affected by national policy changes intended to encourage engagement with paid work. The outcomes identified for Australia are likely to have been mirrored in other nations, especially those that have embraced, or been forced to adopt, more restrictive welfare and income support regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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38. Validity of a Job-Exposure Matrix for Psychosocial Job Stressors: Results from the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey.
- Author
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Milner, A., Niedhammer, I., Chastang, J.-F., Spittal, M. J., and LaMontagne, A. D.
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JOB stress ,INCOME ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,MENTAL health surveys ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Introduction: A Job Exposure Matrix (JEM) for psychosocial job stressors allows assessment of these exposures at a population level. JEMs are particularly useful in situations when information on psychosocial job stressors were not collected individually and can help eliminate the biases that may be present in individual self-report accounts. This research paper describes the development of a JEM in the Australian context. Methods: The Household Income Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey was used to construct a JEM for job control, job demands and complexity, job insecurity, and fairness of pay. Population median values of these variables for all employed people (n = 20,428) were used to define individual exposures across the period 2001 to 2012. The JEM was calculated for the Australian and New Zealand Standard Classification of Occupations (ANZSCO) at the four-digit level, which represents 358 occupations. Both continuous and binary exposures to job stressors were calculated at the 4-digit level. We assessed concordance between the JEM-assigned and individually-reported exposures using the Kappa statistic, sensitivity and specificity assessments. We conducted regression analysis using mental health as an outcome measure. Results: Kappa statistics indicate good agreement between individually-reported and JEM-assigned dichotomous measures for job demands and control, and moderate agreement for job insecurity and fairness of pay. Job control, job demands and security had the highest sensitivity, while specificity was relatively high for the four exposures. Regression analysis shows that most individually reported and JEM measures were significantly associated with mental health, and individually-reported exposures produced much stronger effects on mental health than the JEM-assigned exposures. Discussion: These JEM-based estimates of stressors exposure provide a conservative proxy for individual-level data, and can be applied to a range of health and organisational outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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39. Contact & connect--an intervention to reduce depression stigma and symptoms in construction workers: protocol for a randomised controlled trial.
- Author
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Milner, Allison, Witt, Katrina, Burnside, Lewis, Wilson, Caitlyn, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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SOCIAL stigma ,MENTAL depression ,CONSTRUCTION workers ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,SUICIDE ,WELL-being ,MALE blue collar workers ,HELP-seeking behavior ,THERAPEUTICS ,SUICIDE prevention ,UNEMPLOYMENT & psychology ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONSTRUCTION industry ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,INTERNET ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MENTAL health ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,WORK ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: Males employed in the construction industry have high rates of suicide. Although reasons underpinning this risk are multifaceted, poor help-seeking and stigma are represent major contributors. Males in the construction industry are also exposed to other risk factors for mental ill health and suicide, including unemployment. Sigma-reducing interventions that are accessible and attractive to recently unemployed males in the construction industry could therefore improve help-seeking, and address depression and suicidal behaviour in this population.Methods/design: Contact&Connect will use a parallel individual randomized design to evaluate the effectiveness of a multimedia-based intervention aimed at reducing stigma. The intervention consists of a package of 12 brief contact interventions (BCIs) delivered over a six month period. BCIs will direct participants to informational programs and microsites. Content will address three major themes: debunking depression myths and stereotypes, normalisation, and empowerment. Target enrollment is 630 (315 in each arm), each to be followed for 12 months. Eligible participants will be males, between 30 and 64 years, unemployed at the time of recruitment, registered with Incolink (a social welfare trustee company for unemployed members of the construction industry), and own a smart phone with enabled internet connectivity.Discussion: At present, there are no programs that have been shown to be effective in reducing stigma in the blue-collar male population. Contact&Connect promises to provide a tailored, efficient, and scalable approach to reducing stigma, depressive symptoms and suicidality among unemployed males.Trial Registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Register ACTRN12615000792527 (date of registration: 30 July, 2015). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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40. Occupational class differences in suicide: evidence of changes over time and during the global financial crisis in Australia.
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Milner, Alison J., Niven, Heather, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,SUICIDE statistics ,EMPLOYEE psychology ,SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: Previous research showed an increase in Australian suicide rates during the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). There has been no research investigating whether suicide rates by occupational class changed during the GFC. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the GFC-associated increase in suicide rates in employed Australians may have masked changes by occupational class. Methods: Negative binomial regression models were used to investigate Rate Ratios (RRs) in suicide by occupational class. Years of the GFC (2007, 2008, 2009) were compared to the baseline years 2001-2006. Results: There were widening disparities between a number of the lower class occupations and the highest class occupations during the years 2007, 2008, and 2009 for males, but less evidence of differences for females. Conclusions: Occupational disparities in suicide rates widened over the GFC period. There is a need for programs to be responsive to economic downturns, and to prioritise the occupational groups most affected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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41. Perceived fairness of pay among people with and without disabilities: a propensity score matched analysis of working Australians.
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Milner, Allison, Aitken, Zoe, Krnjacki, Lauren, Bentley, Rebecca, Blakely, Tony, LaMontagne, Anthony D., and Kavanagh, Anne M.
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EMPLOYMENT of people with disabilities ,GENDER differences (Psychology) ,AGE groups ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,JOB satisfaction ,PAY equity - Abstract
Objectives Equity and fairness at work are associated with a range of organizational and health outcomes. Past research suggests that workers with disabilities experience inequity in the workplace. It is difficult to conclude whether the presence of disability is the reason for perceived unfair treatment due to the possible confounding of effect estimates by other demographic or socioeconomic factors. Methods The data source was the Household, Income, and Labor Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey (2001-2012). Propensity for disability was calculated from logistic models including gender, age, education, country of birth, and father's occupational skill level as predictors. We then used nearest neighbor (on propensity score) matched analysis to match workers with disabilities to workers without disability. Results Results suggest that disability is independently associated with lower fairness of pay after controlling for confounding factors in the propensity score matched analysis; although results do suggest less than half a standard deviation difference, indicating small effects. Similar results were apparent in standard multivariable regression models and alternative propensity score analyses (stratification, covariate adjustment using the propensity score, and inverse probability of treatment weighting). Conclusions Whilst neither multivariable regression nor propensity scores adjust for unmeasured confounding, and there remains the potential for other biases, similar results for the two methodological approaches to confounder adjustment provide some confidence of an independent association of disability with perceived unfairness of pay. Based on this, we suggest that the disparity in the perceived fairness of pay between people with and without disabilities may be explained by worse treatment of people with disabilities in the workplace. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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42. Sickness Absence and Psychosocial Job Quality: An Analysis From a Longitudinal Survey of Working Australians, 2005-2012.
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Milner, Allison, Butterworth, Peter, Bentley, Rebecca, Kavanagh, Anne M., and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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WORK & psychology ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DEMOGRAPHY ,DISEASES ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,JOB descriptions ,LABOR supply ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EVALUATION of medical care ,DATA analysis ,ODDS ratio ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Sickness absence is associated with adverse health, organizational, and societal outcomes. Using data from a longitudinal cohort study of working Australians (the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey), we examined the relationship between changes in individuals' overall psychosocial job quality and variation in sickness absence. The outcome variables were paid sickness absence (yes/no) and number of days of paid sickness absence in the past year (2005-2012). The main exposure variable was psychosocial job quality, measured using a psychosocial job quality index (levels of job control, demands and complexity, insecurity, and perceptions of unfair pay). Analysis was conducted using longitudinal fixed-effects logistic regression models and negative binomial regression models. There was a dose-response relationship between the number of psychosocial job stressors reported by an individual and the odds of paid sickness absence (1 adversity: odds ratio (OR) = 1.26, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.09, 1.45 (P = 0.002); 2 adversities: OR = 1.28, 95% CI: 1.09, 1.51 (P = 0.002); ⩾3 adversities: OR = 1.58, 95% CI: 1.29, 1.94 (P < 0.001)). The negative binomial regression models also indicated that respondents reported a greater number of days of sickness absence in response to worsening psychosocial job quality. These results suggest that workplace interventions aiming to improve the quality of work could help reduce sickness absence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
43. 682Do job stressor—mental health relationships vary by migrant status? An Australian comparative analysis.
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Liu, Xiaomin, LaMontagne, Anthony, Bowe, Steven, Li, Lin, and Too, Lay San
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- *
JOB stress , *MENTAL health , *MIGRANT labor , *HEALTH equity , *JOB security , *OCCUPATIONAL exposure - Abstract
Background Migrants may be more likely to experience occupational health inequities (OHIs) than native-born workers due to higher occupational exposure, higher vulnerability to exposure-associated health impacts, or both. This study explores migrant status-related differences in vulnerability to job stressor exposures in terms of mental health in Australia. Methods Data were from wave 14 of the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey. Migrant status was defined by country of birth (COB), the dominant language of COB, and the years since arrival in Australia. Job stressors included skill discretion, decision authority, and job insecurity. Mental health was assessed using the Mental Health Inventory-5 score (MHI-5). Data were analysed using linear regression, adjusting for gender, age, and education. Migrant status was analysed as the effect modifier of job stressor—mental health relationships. Results As expected, skill discretion and decision authority were positively, while job insecurity was negatively associated with the MHI-5 score. However, there was no statistical evidence of migrant status acting as an effect modifier of job stressor—mental health relationships even though the dominant language of COB and years since arrival in Australia have been taken into account. Conclusions The magnitudes of job stressor—mental health relationships do not differ between migrant workers and Australia-born workers. Key messages Differential exposure rather than differential vulnerability is a more important mechanism for generating occupational mental health inequities between migrants and Australian-born workers. Reducing job stressor exposures could reduce the OHIs among migrant workers in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
44. Employment status and mental health among persons with and without a disability: evidence from an Australian cohort study.
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Milner, A., LaMontagne, A. D., Aitken, Z., Bentley, R., and Kavanagh, A. M.
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EMPLOYMENT , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *HEALTH surveys , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MENTAL health , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY ,PSYCHOLOGY of People with disabilities - Abstract
Background: Unemployment and economic inactivity are associated with worse mental health in the general population, but there is limited understanding of whether these relationships are different for those persons with mental or physical disabilities. The aim of this study was to assess whether there were differences in mental health by labour force status among persons with and without disabilities. Method: Over eight annual waves of the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey, a total of 2379 people with disabilities and 11 417 people without disabilities were identified. Mental health using the Mental Component Summary (MCS) from the Short Form 36 was modelled as a function of labour force status using fixed-effects regression models to control for time invariant confounding. Differences between those with and without disabilities were assessed by including an interaction term in regression models. Results: After finding evidence of effect modification, regression models were stratified by disability status. After adjustment, unemployment and economic inactivity were associated with a −1.85 (95% CI −2.96 to −0.73, p=0.001) and −2.66 (95% CI −3.46 to −1.86, p<0.001) reduction in scores of the MCS among those with a disability. For those without a disability, there were smaller declines associated with unemployment (−0.57, 95% CI −1.02 to −0.12, p=0.013) and economic inactivity (−0.34, 95% CI −0.64 to 0.05, p=0.022). Conclusions: These results suggest a greater reduction in mental health for those persons with disabilities who were unemployed or economically inactive than those who were employed. This highlights the value of employment for people with disabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Economically inactive, unemployed and employed suicides in Australia by age and sex over a 10-year period: what was the impact of the 2007 economic recession?
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Milner, Allison, Morrell, Stephen, and LaMontagne, Anthony D
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SUICIDE ,UNEMPLOYED people ,GENDER differences (Psychology) ,RECESSIONS ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Background: Suicide is higher among economically inactive and unemployed persons than employed persons. This paper investigates differences in this relationship by sex and age over the period 2001 to 2010 in Australia. It also examines changes in suicide among employed, unemployed and economically inactive persons during the recession of 2007–09.Method: Suicide data from the National Coroners Information System were utilised for this retrospective study. Negative binomial and Poisson regression was used to estimate the association between suicide and employment status and to investigate differences in suicide rates over the period of the recession (2007–09) compared with the year before the recession (2006).Results: Results suggest that during 2001–10 economically inactive/unemployed males had a suicide rate ratio (RR) of 4.62 [95% confidence interval (CI) 4.10, 5.19; P < 0.001] compared with employed males (RR = 1.00), whereas economically inactive/unemployed females had a suicide RR of 8.44 compared with employed females (95% CI 7.38, 9.67; P < 0.001). There was an increase in suicide among both employed (7% rise in 2007, P = 0.003) and economically inactive/unemployed males during the GFC (22% in 2008, P < 0.001). Suicide also increased among economically inactive/unemployed females (12% in 2007, P = 0.03; 19% in 2008, P = 0.001) but not among employed females.Conclusions: These results suggest the need for adequate policy and social welfare responses to ameliorate the effects of the economic recession on the working age population. Particularly, these should target unemployed and economically inactive men and women in Australia, who may be at higher risk of suicide than previously thought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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46. Employment Arrangements and Mental Health in a Cohort of Working Australians: Are Transitions From Permanent to Temporary Employment Associated With Changes in Mental Health?
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LaMontagne, Anthony D., Milner, Allison, Krnjacki, Lauren, Kavanagh, Anne M., Blakely, Tony A., and Bentley, Rebecca
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- *
JOB classification , *TEMPORARY employment , *AGE distribution , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *STATISTICAL correlation , *EMPLOYMENT , *HEALTH surveys , *MENTAL health , *PANEL analysis , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *SEX distribution , *SECONDARY analysis , *REPEATED measures design , *STATISTICAL models , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
We investigated whether being in temporary employment, as compared with permanent employment, was associated with a difference in Short Form 36 mental health and whether transitions from permanent employment to temporary employment were associated with mental health changes. We used fixed-effects regression in a nationally representative Australian sample with 10 waves of data collection (2001–2010). Interactions by age and sex were tested. Two forms of temporary employment were studied: “casual” (no paid leave entitlements or fixed hours) and “fixed-term contract” (a defined employment period plus paid leave). There were no significant mental health differences between temporary employment and permanent employment in standard fixed-effects analyses and no significant interactions by sex or age. For all age groups combined, there were no significant changes in mental health following transitions from stable permanent employment to temporary employment, but there was a significant interaction with age (P = 0.03) for the stable-permanent-to-casual employment transition, because of a small transition-associated improvement in mental health for workers aged 55–64 years (β = 1.61, 95% confidence interval: 0.34, 2.87; 16% of the standard deviation of mental health scores). Our analyses suggest that temporary employment is not harmful to mental health in the Australian context and that it may be beneficial for 55- to 64-year-olds transitioning from stable permanent employment to casual employment. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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47. The vertical variability of hyporheic fluxes inferred from riverbed temperature data.
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Cranswick, Roger H., Cook, Peter G., Shanafield, Margaret, and Lamontagne, Sebastien
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RIVER channels ,THERMAL diffusivity ,MONTE Carlo method ,SURFACE temperature ,RIVERS - Abstract
We present detailed profiles of vertical water flux from the surface to 1.2 m beneath the Haughton River in the tropical northeast of Australia. A 1-D numerical model is used to estimate vertical flux based on raw temperature time series observations from within downwelling, upwelling, neutral, and convergent sections of the hyporheic zone. A Monte Carlo analysis is used to derive error bounds for the fluxes based on temperature measurement error and uncertainty in effective thermal diffusivity. Vertical fluxes ranged from 5.7 m d
−1 (downward) to −0.2 m d−1 (upward) with the lowest relative errors for values between 0.3 and 6 m d−1 . Our 1-D approach provides a useful alternative to 1-D analytical and other solutions because it does not incorporate errors associated with simplified boundary conditions or assumptions of purely vertical flow, hydraulic parameter values, or hydraulic conditions. To validate the ability of this 1-D approach to represent the vertical fluxes of 2-D flow fields, we compare our model with two simple 2-D flow fields using a commercial numerical model. These comparisons showed that: (1) the 1-D vertical flux was equivalent to the mean vertical component of flux irrespective of a changing horizontal flux; and (2) the subsurface temperature data inherently has a 'spatial footprint' when the vertical flux profiles vary spatially. Thus, the mean vertical flux within a 2-D flow field can be estimated accurately without requiring the flow to be purely vertical. The temperature-derived 1-D vertical flux represents the integrated vertical component of flux along the flow path intersecting the observation point. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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48. Area-Level Unemployment and Perceived Job Insecurity: Evidence from a Longitudinal Survey Conducted in the Australian Working-Age Population.
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Milner, Allison, Kavanagh, Anne, Krnjacki, Lauren, Bentley, Rebecca, and LaMontagne, Anthony D.
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JOB security ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SENSORY perception ,POPULATION geography ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Research significance: Job insecurity, the subjective individual anticipation of involuntary job loss, negatively affects employees’ health and their engagement. Although the relationship between job insecurity and health has been extensively studied, job insecurity as an ‘exposure’ has received far less attention, with little known about the upstream determinants of job insecurity in particular. This research sought to identify the relationship between self-rated job insecurity and area-level unemployment using a longitudinal, nationally representative study of Australian households. Methods: Mixed-effect multi-level regression models were used to assess the relationship between area-based unemployment rates and self-reported job insecurity using data from a longitudinal, nationally representative survey running since 2001. Interaction terms were included to test the hypotheses that the relationship between area-level unemployment and job insecurity differed between occupational skill-level groups and by employment arrangement. Marginal effects were computed to visually depict differences in job insecurity across areas with different levels of unemployment. Results: Results indicated that areas with the lowest unemployment rates had significantly lower job insecurity (predicted value 2.74; 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.71–2.78, P < 0.001) than areas with higher unemployment (predicted value 2.81; 95% CI 2.79–2.84, P < 0.001). There was a stronger relationship between area-level unemployment and job insecurity among precariously and fixed-term employed workers than permanent workers. Conclusion: These findings demonstrate the independent influences of prevailing economic conditions, individual- and job-level factors on job insecurity. Persons working on a casual basis or on a fixed-term contract in areas with higher levels of unemployment are more susceptible to feelings of job insecurity than those working permanently. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Iterative development of Stand Up Australia: a multi-component intervention to reduce workplace sitting.
- Author
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Neuhaus, Maike, Healy, Genevieve N., Fjeldsoe, Brianna S., Lawler, Sheleigh, Owen, Neville, Dunstan, David W., LaMontagne, Anthony D., and Eakin, Elizabeth G.
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HEALTH promotion ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ECOLOGY ,EMPLOYEE attitudes ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,INTERIOR decoration ,JOB descriptions ,LEADERSHIP ,MANAGEMENT ,RESEARCH funding ,SITTING position ,STANDING position ,WORK environment ,ADULT education workshops ,DATA analysis ,LABELING theory ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
Background Sitting, particularly in prolonged, unbroken bouts, is widespread within the office workplace, yet few interventions have addressed this newly-identified health risk behaviour. This paper describes the iterative development process and resulting intervention procedures for the Stand Up Australia research program focusing on a multi-component workplace intervention to reduce sitting time. Methods The development of Stand Up Australia followed three phases. 1) Conceptualisation: Stand Up Australia was based on social cognitive theory and social ecological model components. These were operationalized via a taxonomy of intervention strategies and designed to target multiple levels of influence including: organisational structures (e.g. via management consultation), the physical work environment (via provision of height-adjustable workstations), and individual employees (e.g. via face-to-face coaching). 2) Formative research: Intervention components were separately tested for their feasibility and acceptability. 3) Pilot studies: Stand Up Comcare tested the integrated intervention elements in a controlled pilot study examining efficacy, feasibility and acceptability. Stand Up UQ examined the additional value of the organisational- and individual-level components over height-adjustable workstations only in a three-arm controlled trial. In both pilot studies, office workers' sitting time was measured objectively using activPAL3 devices and the intervention was refined based on qualitative feedback from managers and employees. Results Results and feedback from participants and managers involved in the intervention development phases suggest high efficacy, acceptance, and feasibility of all intervention components. The final version of the Stand Up Australia intervention includes strategies at the organisational (senior management consultation, representatives consultation workshop, team champions, staff information and brainstorming session with information booklet, and supportive emails from managers to staff), environmental (height-adjustable workstations), and individual level (face-to-face coaching session and telephone support). Stand Up Australia is currently being evaluated in the context of a cluster-randomised controlled trial at the Department of Human Services (DHS) in Melbourne, Australia. Conclusions Stand Up Australia is an evidence-guided and systematically developed workplace intervention targeting reductions in office workers' sitting time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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50. Reducing office workers' sitting time: rationale and study design for the Stand Up Victoria cluster randomized trial.
- Author
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Dunstan, David W., Wiesner, Glen, Eakin, Elizabeth G., Neuhaus, Maike, Owen, Neville, LaMontagne, Anthony D., Moodie, Marj, Winkler, Elisabeth A. H., Fjeldsoe, Brianna S., Lawler, Sheleigh, and Healy, Genevieve N.
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SEDENTARY lifestyles ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CARBOHYDRATE intolerance ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases - Abstract
Background Excessive time spent in sedentary behaviours (sitting or lying with low energy expenditure) is associated with an increased risk for type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and some cancers. Desk-based office workers typically accumulate high amounts of daily sitting time, often in prolonged unbroken bouts. The Stand Up Victoria study aims to determine whether a 3-month multi-component intervention in the office setting reduces workplace sitting, particularly prolonged, unbroken sitting time, and results in improvements in cardio- metabolic biomarkers and work-related outcomes, compared to usual practice. Methods/design A two-arm cluster-randomized controlled trial (RCT), with worksites as the unit of randomization, will be conducted in 16 worksites located in Victoria, Australia. Work units from one organisation (Department of Human Services, Australian Government) will be allocated to either the multi-component intervention (organisational, environmental [height- adjustable workstations], and individual behavioural strategies) or to a usual practice control group. The recruitment target is 160 participants (office-based workers aged 18-65 years and working at least 0.6 full time equivalent) per arm. At each assessment (0- [baseline], 3- [post intervention], and 12-months [follow-up]), objective measurement via the activPAL3 activity monitor will be used to assess workplace: sitting time (primary outcome); prolonged sitting time (sitting time accrued in bouts of ≥30 minutes); standing time; sit-to-stand transitions; and, moving time. Additional outcomes assessed will include: non-workplace activity; cardio-metabolic biomarkers and health indicators (including fasting glucose, lipids and insulin; anthropometric measures; blood pressure; and, musculoskeletal symptoms); and, work-related outcomes (presenteeism, absenteeism, productivity, work performance). Incremental cost-effectiveness and identification of both workplace and individual-level mediators and moderators of change will also be evaluated. Discussion Stand Up Victoria will be the first cluster-RCT to evaluate the effectiveness of a multi- component intervention aimed at reducing prolonged workplace sitting in office workers. Strengths include the objective measurement of activity and assessment of the intervention on markers of cardio-metabolic health. Health- and work-related benefits, as well as the cost- effectiveness of the intervention, will help to inform future occupational practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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