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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00005680
Other study ID # 1070
Secondary ID R01HL036310
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received May 25, 2000
Last updated July 28, 2016
Start date September 1993
Est. completion date August 2007

Study information

Verified date January 2008
Source National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Federal Government
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

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.


Description:

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.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 0
Est. completion date August 2007
Est. primary completion date August 2007
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group N/A to 100 Years
Eligibility No eligibility criteria

Study Design

N/A


Locations

Country Name City State
n/a

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)

References & Publications (113)

Armstrong NC, Paganga G, Brunner E, Miller NJ, Nanchahal K, Shipley M, Rice-Evans CA, Marmot MG, Diplock AT. Reference values for alpha-tocopherol and beta-carotene in the Whitehall II Study. Free Radic Res. 1997 Aug;27(2):207-19. — View Citation

Bartley M, Martikainen P, Shipley M, Marmot M. Gender differences in the relationship of partner's social class to behavioural risk factors and social support in the Whitehall II study. Soc Sci Med. 2004 Nov;59(9):1925-36. — View Citation

Bosma H, Marmot MG, Hemingway H, Nicholson AC, Brunner E, Stansfeld SA. Low job control and risk of coronary heart disease in Whitehall II (prospective cohort) study. BMJ. 1997 Feb 22;314(7080):558-65. — View Citation

Bosma H, Peter R, Siegrist J, Marmot M. Two alternative job stress models and the risk of coronary heart disease. Am J Public Health. 1998 Jan;88(1):68-74. — View Citation

Bosma H, Stansfeld SA, Marmot MG. Job control, personal characteristics, and heart disease. J Occup Health Psychol. 1998 Oct;3(4):402-9. — View Citation

Britton A, Marmot M. Different measures of alcohol consumption and risk of coronary heart disease and all-cause mortality: 11-year follow-up of the Whitehall II Cohort Study. Addiction. 2004 Jan;99(1):109-16. — View Citation

Britton A, Shipley M, Marmot M, Hemingway H. Does access to cardiac investigation and treatment contribute to social and ethnic differences in coronary heart disease? Whitehall II prospective cohort study. BMJ. 2004 Aug 7;329(7461):318. Epub 2004 Jul 5. — View Citation

Britton A, Singh-Manoux A, Marmot M. Alcohol consumption and cognitive function in the Whitehall II Study. Am J Epidemiol. 2004 Aug 1;160(3):240-7. — View Citation

Brunner E, Davey Smith G, Marmot M, Canner R, Beksinska M, O'Brien J. Childhood social circumstances and psychosocial and behavioural factors as determinants of plasma fibrinogen. Lancet. 1996 Apr 13;347(9007):1008-13. — View Citation

Brunner E, Shipley MJ, Blane D, Smith GD, Marmot MG. When does cardiovascular risk start? Past and present socioeconomic circumstances and risk factors in adulthood. J Epidemiol Community Health. 1999 Dec;53(12):757-64. — View Citation

Brunner E, Stallone D, Juneja M, Bingham S, Marmot M. Dietary assessment in Whitehall II: comparison of 7 d diet diary and food-frequency questionnaire and validity against biomarkers. Br J Nutr. 2001 Sep;86(3):405-14. — View Citation

Brunner EJ, Hemingway H, Walker BR, Page M, Clarke P, Juneja M, Shipley MJ, Kumari M, Andrew R, Seckl JR, Papadopoulos A, Checkley S, Rumley A, Lowe GD, Stansfeld SA, Marmot MG. Adrenocortical, autonomic, and inflammatory causes of the metabolic syndrome: nested case-control study. Circulation. 2002 Nov 19;106(21):2659-65. — View Citation

Brunner EJ, Marmot MG, Nanchahal K, Shipley MJ, Stansfeld SA, Juneja M, Alberti KG. Social inequality in coronary risk: central obesity and the metabolic syndrome. Evidence from the Whitehall II study. Diabetologia. 1997 Nov;40(11):1341-9. — View Citation

Brunner EJ, Marmot MG, White IR, O'Brien JR, Etherington MD, Slavin BM, Kearney EM, Smith GD. Gender and employment grade differences in blood cholesterol, apolipoproteins and haemostatic factors in the Whitehall II study. Atherosclerosis. 1993 Sep;102(2):195-207. — View Citation

Brunner EJ, Wunsch H, Marmot MG. What is an optimal diet? Relationship of macronutrient intake to obesity, glucose tolerance, lipoprotein cholesterol levels and the metabolic syndrome in the Whitehall II study. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 2001 Jan;25(1):45-53. — View Citation

Carroll D, Davey Smith G, Sheffield D, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG. The relationship between socioeconomic status, hostility, and blood pressure reactions to mental stress in men: data from the Whitehall II study. Health Psychol. 1997 Mar;16(2):131-6. — View Citation

Carroll D, Smith GD, Sheffield D, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG. Pressor reactions to psychological stress and prediction of future blood pressure: data from the Whitehall II Study. BMJ. 1995 Mar 25;310(6982):771-6. Erratum in: BMJ 1995 May 6;310(6988):1164. — View Citation

Carroll D, Smith GD, Shipley MJ, Steptoe A, Brunner EJ, Marmot MG. Blood pressure reactions to acute psychological stress and future blood pressure status: a 10-year follow-up of men in the Whitehall II study. Psychosom Med. 2001 Sep-Oct;63(5):737-43. — View Citation

Chandola T, Bartley M, Sacker A, Jenkinson C, Marmot M. Health selection in the Whitehall II study, UK. Soc Sci Med. 2003 May;56(10):2059-72. — View Citation

Chandola T, Kuper H, Singh-Manoux A, Bartley M, Marmot M. The effect of control at home on CHD events in the Whitehall II study: Gender differences in psychosocial domestic pathways to social inequalities in CHD. Soc Sci Med. 2004 Apr;58(8):1501-9. — View Citation

Chandola T, Siegrist J, Marmot M. Do changes in effort-reward imbalance at work contribute to an explanation of the social gradient in angina? Occup Environ Med. 2005 Apr;62(4):223-30. — View Citation

Dykes J, Brunner EJ, Martikainen PT, Wardle J. Socioeconomic gradient in body size and obesity among women: the role of dietary restraint, disinhibition and hunger in the Whitehall II study. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 2004 Feb;28(2):262-8. — View Citation

Eliassen AH, Colditz GA, Rosner B, Willett WC, Hankinson SE. Serum lipids, lipid-lowering drugs, and the risk of breast cancer. Arch Intern Med. 2005 Oct 24;165(19):2264-71. — View Citation

Feeney A, North F, Head J, Canner R, Marmot M. Socioeconomic and sex differentials in reason for sickness absence from the Whitehall II Study. Occup Environ Med. 1998 Feb;55(2):91-8. — View Citation

Ferrie JE, Kivimäki M, Head J, Shipley MJ, Vahtera J, Marmot MG. A comparison of self-reported sickness absence with absences recorded in employers' registers: evidence from the Whitehall II study. Occup Environ Med. 2005 Feb;62(2):74-9. — View Citation

Ferrie JE, Martikainen P, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG, Stansfeld SA, Smith GD. Employment status and health after privatisation in white collar civil servants: prospective cohort study. BMJ. 2001 Mar 17;322(7287):647-51. — View Citation

Ferrie JE, Martikainen P, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG. Self-reported economic difficulties and coronary events in men: evidence from the Whitehall II study. Int J Epidemiol. 2005 Jun;34(3):640-8. Epub 2005 Apr 14. — View Citation

Ferrie JE, Shipley MJ, Davey Smith G, Stansfeld SA, Marmot MG. Change in health inequalities among British civil servants: the Whitehall II study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2002 Dec;56(12):922-6. — View Citation

Ferrie JE, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG, Martikainen P, Stansfeld SA, Smith GD. Job insecurity in white-collar workers: toward an explanation of associations with health. J Occup Health Psychol. 2001 Jan;6(1):26-42. — View Citation

Ferrie JE, Shipley MJ, Newman K, Stansfeld SA, Marmot M. Self-reported job insecurity and health in the Whitehall II study: potential explanations of the relationship. Soc Sci Med. 2005 Apr;60(7):1593-602. — View Citation

Ferrie JE, Shipley MJ, Stansfeld SA, Marmot MG. Effects of chronic job insecurity and change in job security on self reported health, minor psychiatric morbidity, physiological measures, and health related behaviours in British civil servants: the Whitehall II study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2002 Jun;56(6):450-4. — View Citation

Ferrie JE, Shipley MJ, Stansfeld SA, Smith GD, Marmot M; Whitehall II Study. Future uncertainty and socioeconomic inequalities in health: the Whitehall II study. Soc Sci Med. 2003 Aug;57(4):637-46. — View Citation

Fuhrer R, Head J, Marmot MG. Social position, age, and memory performance in the Whitehall II Study. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1999;896:359-62. — View Citation

Fuhrer R, Stansfeld SA, Chemali J, Shipley MJ. Gender, social relations and mental health: prospective findings from an occupational cohort (Whitehall II study). Soc Sci Med. 1999 Jan;48(1):77-87. — View Citation

Fuhrer R, Stansfeld SA. How gender affects patterns of social relations and their impact on health: a comparison of one or multiple sources of support from "close persons". Soc Sci Med. 2002 Mar;54(5):811-25. — View Citation

Griffin JM, Fuhrer R, Stansfeld SA, Marmot M. The importance of low control at work and home on depression and anxiety: do these effects vary by gender and social class? Soc Sci Med. 2002 Mar;54(5):783-98. — View Citation

Head J, Stansfeld SA, Siegrist J. The psychosocial work environment and alcohol dependence: a prospective study. Occup Environ Med. 2004 Mar;61(3):219-24. — View Citation

Hemingway H, Marmot M. Evidence based cardiology: psychosocial factors in the aetiology and prognosis of coronary heart disease. Systematic review of prospective cohort studies. BMJ. 1999 May 29;318(7196):1460-7. Review. — View Citation

Hemingway H, Nicholson A, Stafford M, Roberts R, Marmot M. The impact of socioeconomic status on health functioning as assessed by the SF-36 questionnaire: the Whitehall II Study. Am J Public Health. 1997 Sep;87(9):1484-90. — View Citation

Hemingway H, Shipley M, Brunner E, Britton A, Malik M, Marmot M. Does autonomic function link social position to coronary risk? The Whitehall II study. Circulation. 2005 Jun 14;111(23):3071-7. Epub 2005 Jun 6. — View Citation

Hemingway H, Shipley M, Mullen MJ, Kumari M, Brunner E, Taylor M, Donald AE, Deanfield JE, Marmot M. Social and psychosocial influences on inflammatory markers and vascular function in civil servants (the Whitehall II study). Am J Cardiol. 2003 Oct 15;92(8):984-7. — View Citation

Hemingway H, Shipley M, Stansfeld S, Shannon H, Frank J, Brunner E, Marmot M. Are risk factors for atherothrombotic disease associated with back pain sickness absence? The Whitehall II Study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 1999 Apr;53(4):197-203. — View Citation

Hemingway H, Shipley MJ, Stansfeld S, Marmot M. Sickness absence from back pain, psychosocial work characteristics and employment grade among office workers. Scand J Work Environ Health. 1997 Apr;23(2):121-9. — View Citation

Hemingway H, Stafford M, Stansfeld S, Shipley M, Marmot M. Is the SF-36 a valid measure of change in population health? Results from the Whitehall II Study. BMJ. 1997 Nov 15;315(7118):1273-9. — View Citation

Hemingway H, Whitty CJ, Shipley M, Stansfeld MS, Brunner E, Fuhrer R, Marmot M. Psychosocial risk factors for coronary disease in White, South Asian and Afro-Caribbean civil servants: the Whitehall II study. Ethn Dis. 2001 Autumn;11(3):391-400. — View Citation

Hillsdon MM, Brunner EJ, Guralnik JM, Marmot MG. Prospective study of physical activity and physical function in early old age. Am J Prev Med. 2005 Apr;28(3):245-50. — View Citation

Kivimäki M, Ferrie JE, Brunner E, Head J, Shipley MJ, Vahtera J, Marmot MG. Justice at work and reduced risk of coronary heart disease among employees: the Whitehall II Study. Arch Intern Med. 2005 Oct 24;165(19):2245-51. — View Citation

Kivimäki M, Ferrie JE, Head J, Shipley MJ, Vahtera J, Marmot MG. Organisational justice and change in justice as predictors of employee health: the Whitehall II study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2004 Nov;58(11):931-7. — View Citation

Kivimäki M, Head J, Ferrie JE, Hemingway H, Shipley MJ, Vahtera J, Marmot MG. Working while ill as a risk factor for serious coronary events: the Whitehall II study. Am J Public Health. 2005 Jan;95(1):98-102. — View Citation

Kivimäki M, Head J, Ferrie JE, Shipley MJ, Vahtera J, Marmot MG. Sickness absence as a global measure of health: evidence from mortality in the Whitehall II prospective cohort study. BMJ. 2003 Aug 16;327(7411):364. — View Citation

Kumari M, Brunner E, Fuhrer R. Minireview: mechanisms by which the metabolic syndrome and diabetes impair memory. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2000 May;55(5):B228-32. Review. — View Citation

Kumari M, Head J, Marmot M. Prospective study of social and other risk factors for incidence of type 2 diabetes in the Whitehall II study. Arch Intern Med. 2004 Sep 27;164(17):1873-80. — View Citation

Kumari M, Marmot M, Brunner E. Social determinants of von willebrand factor: the Whitehall II study. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2000 Jul;20(7):1842-7. — View Citation

Kumari M, Marmot M, Rumley A, Lowe G. Social, behavioral, and metabolic determinants of plasma viscosity in the Whitehall II Study. Ann Epidemiol. 2005 May;15(5):398-404. — View Citation

Kumari M, Seeman T, Marmot M. Biological predictors of change in functioning in the Whitehall II study. Ann Epidemiol. 2004 Apr;14(4):250-7. — View Citation

Kunz-Ebrecht SR, Kirschbaum C, Marmot M, Steptoe A. Differences in cortisol awakening response on work days and weekends in women and men from the Whitehall II cohort. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2004 May;29(4):516-28. — View Citation

Kuper H, Marmot M. Intimations of mortality: perceived age of leaving middle age as a predictor of future health outcomes within the Whitehall II study. Age Ageing. 2003 Mar;32(2):178-84. — View Citation

Kuper H, Marmot M. Job strain, job demands, decision latitude, and risk of coronary heart disease within the Whitehall II study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2003 Feb;57(2):147-53. — View Citation

Langenberg C, Shipley MJ, Batty GD, Marmot MG. Adult socioeconomic position and the association between height and coronary heart disease mortality: findings from 33 years of follow-up in the Whitehall Study. Am J Public Health. 2005 Apr;95(4):628-32. — View Citation

Marmot M, Brunner E. Cohort Profile: the Whitehall II study. Int J Epidemiol. 2005 Apr;34(2):251-6. Epub 2004 Dec 2. — View Citation

Marmot M, Feeney A, Shipley M, North F, Syme SL. Sickness absence as a measure of health status and functioning: from the UK Whitehall II study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 1995 Apr;49(2):124-30. — View Citation

Marmot M, Ryff CD, Bumpass LL, Shipley M, Marks NF. Social inequalities in health: next questions and converging evidence. Soc Sci Med. 1997 Mar;44(6):901-10. — View Citation

Marmot M, Shipley M, Brunner E, Hemingway H. Relative contribution of early life and adult socioeconomic factors to adult morbidity in the Whitehall II study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2001 May;55(5):301-7. — View Citation

Marmot M. Social determinants of health: from observation to policy. Med J Aust. 2000 Apr 17;172(8):379-82. Review. — View Citation

Marmot MG, Bosma H, Hemingway H, Brunner E, Stansfeld S. Contribution of job control and other risk factors to social variations in coronary heart disease incidence. Lancet. 1997 Jul 26;350(9073):235-9. — View Citation

Marmot MG, North F, Feeney A, Head J. Alcohol consumption and sickness absence: from the Whitehall II study. Addiction. 1993 Mar;88(3):369-82. — View Citation

Marmot MG, Smith GD, Stansfeld S, Patel C, North F, Head J, White I, Brunner E, Feeney A. Health inequalities among British civil servants: the Whitehall II study. Lancet. 1991 Jun 8;337(8754):1387-93. — View Citation

Martikainen P, Brunner E, Marmot M. Socioeconomic differences in dietary patterns among middle-aged men and women. Soc Sci Med. 2003 Apr;56(7):1397-410. — View Citation

Martikainen P, Ishizaki M, Marmot MG, Nakagawa H, Kagamimori S. Socioeconomic differences in behavioural and biological risk factors: a comparison of a Japanese and an English cohort of employed men. Int J Epidemiol. 2001 Aug;30(4):833-8. — View Citation

Martikainen P, Stansfeld S, Hemingway H, Marmot M. Determinants of socioeconomic differences in change in physical and mental functioning. Soc Sci Med. 1999 Aug;49(4):499-507. — View Citation

Martikainen PT, Marmot MG. Socioeconomic differences in weight gain and determinants and consequences of coronary risk factors. Am J Clin Nutr. 1999 Apr;69(4):719-26. — View Citation

Mein G, Martikainen P, Hemingway H, Stansfeld S, Marmot M. Is retirement good or bad for mental and physical health functioning? Whitehall II longitudinal study of civil servants. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2003 Jan;57(1):46-9. — View Citation

Mein G, Martikainen P, Stansfeld SA, Brunner EJ, Fuhrer R, Marmot MG. Predictors of early retirement in British civil servants. Age Ageing. 2000 Nov;29(6):529-36. — View Citation

Mein GK, Shipley MJ, Hillsdon M, Ellison GT, Marmot MG. Work, retirement and physical activity: cross-sectional analyses from the Whitehall II study. Eur J Public Health. 2005 Jun;15(3):317-22. Epub 2005 Jun 7. — View Citation

Nicholson A, White IR, Macfarlane P, Brunner E, Marmot M. Rose questionnaire angina in younger men and women: gender differences in the relationship to cardiovascular risk factors and other reported symptoms. J Clin Epidemiol. 1999 Apr;52(4):337-46. — View Citation

North F, Syme SL, Feeney A, Head J, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG. Explaining socioeconomic differences in sickness absence: the Whitehall II Study. BMJ. 1993 Feb 6;306(6874):361-6. — View Citation

North FM, Syme SL, Feeney A, Shipley M, Marmot M. Psychosocial work environment and sickness absence among British civil servants: the Whitehall II study. Am J Public Health. 1996 Mar;86(3):332-40. Erratum in: Am J Public Health 1996 Aug;86(8 Pt 1):1093. — View Citation

Pilgrim JA, Stansfeld S, Marmot M. Low blood pressure, low mood? BMJ. 1992 Jan 11;304(6819):75-8. — View Citation

Rael EG, Stansfeld SA, Shipley M, Head J, Feeney A, Marmot M. Sickness absence in the Whitehall II study, London: the role of social support and material problems. J Epidemiol Community Health. 1995 Oct;49(5):474-81. — View Citation

Rennie KL, Hemingway H, Kumari M, Brunner E, Malik M, Marmot M. Effects of moderate and vigorous physical activity on heart rate variability in a British study of civil servants. Am J Epidemiol. 2003 Jul 15;158(2):135-43. — View Citation

Rennie KL, McCarthy N, Yazdgerdi S, Marmot M, Brunner E. Association of the metabolic syndrome with both vigorous and moderate physical activity. Int J Epidemiol. 2003 Aug;32(4):600-6. — View Citation

Roberts R, Brunner E, Marmot M. Psychological factors in the relationship between alcohol and cardiovascular morbidity. Soc Sci Med. 1995 Dec;41(11):1513-6. — View Citation

Roberts R, Brunner E, White I, Marmot M. Gender differences in occupational mobility and structure of employment in the British Civil Service. Soc Sci Med. 1993 Dec;37(12):1415-25. — View Citation

Sheffield D, Smith GD, Carroll D, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG. The effects of blood pressure resting level and lability on cardiovascular reactions to laboratory stress. Int J Psychophysiol. 1997 Sep;27(2):79-86. — View Citation

Siegrist J, Starke D, Chandola T, Godin I, Marmot M, Niedhammer I, Peter R. The measurement of effort-reward imbalance at work: European comparisons. Soc Sci Med. 2004 Apr;58(8):1483-99. — View Citation

Singh-Manoux A, Adler NE, Marmot MG. Subjective social status: its determinants and its association with measures of ill-health in the Whitehall II study. Soc Sci Med. 2003 Mar;56(6):1321-33. — View Citation

Singh-Manoux A, Britton AR, Marmot M. Vascular disease and cognitive function: evidence from the Whitehall II Study. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2003 Oct;51(10):1445-50. — View Citation

Singh-Manoux A, Clarke P, Marmot M. Multiple measures of socio-economic position and psychosocial health: proximal and distal measures. Int J Epidemiol. 2002 Dec;31(6):1192-9; discussion 1199-200. — View Citation

Singh-Manoux A, Ferrie JE, Chandola T, Marmot M. Socioeconomic trajectories across the life course and health outcomes in midlife: evidence for the accumulation hypothesis? Int J Epidemiol. 2004 Oct;33(5):1072-9. Epub 2004 Jul 15. — View Citation

Singh-Manoux A, Ferrie JE, Lynch JW, Marmot M. The role of cognitive ability (intelligence) in explaining the association between socioeconomic position and health: evidence from the Whitehall II prospective cohort study. Am J Epidemiol. 2005 May 1;161(9):831-9. — View Citation

Singh-Manoux A, Richards M, Marmot M. Leisure activities and cognitive function in middle age: evidence from the Whitehall II study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2003 Nov;57(11):907-13. — View Citation

Stafford M, Bartley M, Mitchell R, Marmot M. Characteristics of individuals and characteristics of areas: investigating their influence on health in the Whitehall II study. Health Place. 2001 Jun;7(2):117-29. — View Citation

Stafford M, Hemingway H, Marmot M. Current obesity, steady weight change and weight fluctuation as predictors of physical functioning in middle aged office workers: the Whitehall II Study. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 1998 Jan;22(1):23-31. — View Citation

Stafford M, Hemingway H, Stansfeld SA, Brunner E, Marmot M. Behavioural and biological correlates of physical functioning in middle aged office workers: the UK whitehall II study. J Epidemiol Community Health. 1998 Jun;52(6):353-8. — View Citation

Stafford M, Martikainen P, Lahelma E, Marmot M. Neighbourhoods and self rated health: a comparison of public sector employees in London and Helsinki. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2004 Sep;58(9):772-8. — View Citation

Stallone DD, Brunner EJ, Bingham SA, Marmot MG. Dietary assessment in Whitehall II: the influence of reporting bias on apparent socioeconomic variation in nutrient intakes. Eur J Clin Nutr. 1997 Dec;51(12):815-25. — View Citation

Stansfeld S, Feeney A, Head J, Canner R, North F, Marmot M. Sickness absence for psychiatric illness: the Whitehall II Study. Soc Sci Med. 1995 Jan;40(2):189-97. — View Citation

Stansfeld S, Head J, Ferrie J. Short-term disability, sickness absence, and social gradients in the Whitehall II Study. Int J Law Psychiatry. 1999 Sep-Dec;22(5-6):425-39. — View Citation

Stansfeld S, Marmot M. Deriving a survey measure of social support: the reliability and validity of the Close Persons Questionnaire. Soc Sci Med. 1992 Oct;35(8):1027-35. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Bosma H, Hemingway H, Marmot MG. Psychosocial work characteristics and social support as predictors of SF-36 health functioning: the Whitehall II study. Psychosom Med. 1998 May-Jun;60(3):247-55. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Fuhrer R, Head J, Ferrie J, Shipley M. Work and psychiatric disorder in the Whitehall II Study. J Psychosom Res. 1997 Jul;43(1):73-81. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Fuhrer R, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG. Psychological distress as a risk factor for coronary heart disease in the Whitehall II Study. Int J Epidemiol. 2002 Feb;31(1):248-55. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Fuhrer R, Shipley MJ, Marmot MG. Work characteristics predict psychiatric disorder: prospective results from the Whitehall II Study. Occup Environ Med. 1999 May;56(5):302-7. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Fuhrer R, Shipley MJ. Types of social support as predictors of psychiatric morbidity in a cohort of British Civil Servants (Whitehall II Study). Psychol Med. 1998 Jul;28(4):881-92. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Head J, Fuhrer R, Wardle J, Cattell V. Social inequalities in depressive symptoms and physical functioning in the Whitehall II study: exploring a common cause explanation. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2003 May;57(5):361-7. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Head J, Marmot MG. Explaining social class differences in depression and well-being. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 1998 Jan;33(1):1-9. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Marmot MG. Social class and minor psychiatric disorder in British Civil Servants: a validated screening survey using the General Health Questionnaire. Psychol Med. 1992 Aug;22(3):739-49. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Roberts R, Foot SP. Assessing the validity of the SF-36 General Health Survey. Qual Life Res. 1997 Apr;6(3):217-24. — View Citation

Stansfeld SA, Smith GD, Marmot M. Association between physical and psychological morbidity in the Whitehall II Study. J Psychosom Res. 1993 Apr;37(3):227-38. — View Citation

Steptoe A, Willemsen G. The influence of low job control on ambulatory blood pressure and perceived stress over the working day in men and women from the Whitehall II cohort. J Hypertens. 2004 May;22(5):915-20. — View Citation

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* Note: There are 113 references in allClick here to view all references

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