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Differential associations of job control components with both waist circumference and body mass index
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- UK : Pergamon, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Introduction The Job Demand-Control-Support (JDCS) model is commonly used to investigate associations between psychosocial work factors and employee health, yet research considering obesity using the JDCS model remains inconclusive. Objective This study investigates which parts of the JDCS model are associated with measures of obesity and provides a comparison between waist circumference (higher values imply central obesity) and body mass index (BMI, higher values imply overall obesity). Methods Contrary to common practice, in this study the JDCS components are not reduced into composite or global scores. In light of emerging evidence that the two components of job control (skill discretion and decision authority) could have differential associations with related health outcomes, components of the JDCS model were analysed at the subscale level. A cross-sectional design with a South Australian cohort ( N = 450) combined computer-assisted telephone interview data and clinic-measured height, weight and waist circumference. Results After controlling for sex, age, household income, work hours and job nature (blue vs. white-collar), the two components of job control were the only parts of the JDCS model to hold significant associations with measures of obesity. Notably, the associations between skill discretion and waist circumference ( b = −.502, p = .001), and skill discretion and BMI ( b = −.163, p = .005) were negative. Conversely, the association between decision authority and waist circumference ( b = .282, p = .022) was positive. Conclusion These findings are significant since skill discretion and decision authority are typically combined into a composite measure of job control or decision latitude. Our findings suggest skill discretion and decision authority should be treated separately since combining these theoretically distinct components may conceal their differential associations with measures of obesity, masking their individual importance. Psychosocial work factors displayed stronger associations and explained greater variance in waist circumference compared with BMI, and possible reasons for this are discussed.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Employment
Male
Work
obesity
Health (social science)
Waist
Cross-sectional study
Job control
media_common.quotation_subject
Models, Psychological
skill discretion
Body Mass Index
History and Philosophy of Science
Humans
Obesity
Occupations
Occupational Health
job control
media_common
2. Zero hunger
job strain
Job strain
Australia
work stress
Discretion
Circumference
Cross-Sectional Studies
decision authority
Female
psychosocial stress
Waist Circumference
Psychology
Psychosocial
Social psychology
Body mass index
Demography
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....8336d1debc91ff06b1e3dc0ff0caa785