Hypertension Clinical Trial
To examine the effect on health and disease of the work environment, psychological workload, control over work pacing and content, opportunity for use of skills, social support at work; the moderating effect on these relationships of social supports; and, the interaction between these psychosocial factors and other established risk factors in the etiology of chronic disease.
BACKGROUND:
One of the major health problems facing industrialized countries is the persisting social
class differences in the rate of occurrence of the major chronic diseases. It is true in the
United States as it is in the United Kingdom, Scandinavia, Japan, and other countries. The
advantage of investigating these social differences in the United Kingdom is that they have
been most extensively documented, but findings are likely to be generalizable. The Black
Report comprehensively reviewed the persisting social inequalities in health and concluded
that the reasons were not completely understood. The Whitehall Study of the British civil
service confirms the social gradient in mortality.
In the British civil service studies, as in the country as a whole, social class is defined
on the basis of occupation. This raises the question as to whether the observed differences
in morbidity and mortality are due to factors related to occupation or the general way of
life. In many countries there are well documented social class differences in aspects of
life-style: smoking, leisure-time physical activity, obesity, diet. Such differences were
confirmed in civil servants studies, but these were insufficient to account for differences
in mortality. There are thus two types of question: what accounts for the differences in
smoking and other aspects of life style among men and women in different occupations? and;
to what extent may the unexplained social differences in disease rates be related to factors
associated with work as distinct from way of life?
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
There was a cross-sectional study and a short-term longitudinal study linking baseline data
with morbidity based on sickness-absence records collected over an eighteen month period.
Each subject was screened in an on-site work clinic. Questions were included on birthdate,
civil service grade, marital status, family history of cardiovascular disease, occupation,
car and house ownership, ethnicity, medical history of cardiovascular and respiratory
problems, smoking, coffee and alcohol use, dietary intake, physical activity, work
characteristics, social support, life satisfaction, life events, and mental illness. Type A
behavior was assessed by the Framingham Type A Scale. A separately funded physical exam was
conducted and included data on blood pressure, height, weight, pulse, ECG, blood clotting
factors, and serum cholesterol. Initial analysis included calculation of prevalence rates of
ischemic heart disease by age, sex, and social class as measured by employment grade.
Dependent variables were crosstabulated for various categories of independent variables. The
independent variables consisted of measures of psychosocial stress arising from work and
personal situations.
The study was renewed in 1993 and again in 1997 to continue the follow-up of the cohort and
collect further outcome data. This was achieved by 1) continued collection of sickness
absence data; 2) obtaining information from GP's regarding long spells of absence; 3)
obtaining death certificates and cancer registrations; and 4) a repeat questionnaire to all
10,314 participants to ensure completeness of outcome data. With additional outcome data the
investigators used their extensive exposure database to explain the socio-economic gradient
in health, encompassing both external influences and biomedical mechanisms. The main focus
of the analysis was the role of work stress and social supports and networks both in
explaining differences in health between socio-economic groups and individual differences in
health. The analysis of these individual differences in health paid particular attention to
women and ethnic minorities.
The study was renewed in 2002 to :(1) determine the extent to which socio-economic position
and psychosocial factors influence pathophysiological responses and sub-clinical vascular
disease directly and via health related behaviors, (2) examine psychosocial explanations for
socio-economic differences in coronary health in an occupational cohort moving out of work,
(3) determine, in our aging population, the relationships between socio-economic position,
coronary disease and health functioning and disability.
;
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