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Mental stress and psychosocial factors at work in relation to multiple‐site musculoskeletal pain: A longitudinal study of kitchen workers
Author(s) -
Haukkal Eija,
LeinoArjasl Päivi,
Ojajärvil Anneli,
Takalal EsaPekka,
ViikariJuntural Eira,
Riihimäkil Hilkka
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
european journal of pain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.305
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1532-2149
pISSN - 1090-3801
DOI - 10.1016/j.ejpain.2010.09.005
Subject(s) - psychosocial , logistic regression , job control , mental health , psychology , odds ratio , generalized estimating equation , demography , medicine , clinical psychology , work (physics) , psychiatry , mathematics , engineering , statistics , mechanical engineering , sociology
Among 385 female kitchen workers, we examined (1) whether mental stress and psychosocial factors at work (job control, skill discretion, supervisor support, co‐worker relationships, and hurry) predict multiple‐site musculoskeletal pain (MSP; defined as pain at ≥3 of seven sites) and (2) reversedly, whether MSP predicts these psychosocial factors. Data were collected by questionnaire at 3‐month intervals during 2 years. Trajectory analysis was applied. Four trajectories of MSP prevalence emerged: Low, Descending, Ascending, and High. For the psychosocial factors, a two‐trajectory model (Ascending or High vs. Low) yielded the best fit. In logistic regression analysis, with the Low MSP trajectory as reference, poor co‐worker relationships (odds ratio [OR] 3.9), mental stress (3.1) and hurry (2.1) at baseline predicted belonging to the High MSP trajectory. Also MSP at baseline predicted the trajectories (Ascending vs. Low) of low job control (2.2) and mental stress (3.2). Adverse changes in most psychosocial factors were associated with belonging to the High (ORs between 2.3 and 8.6) and Ascending (2.7–5.5) MSP trajectories. In generalized estimating equations, time‐lagged by 3 months, all psychosocial factors but two predicted MSP (1.4–2.1), allowing, e.g. for MSP at baseline, and vice versa , MSP predicted low job control, low supervisor support, and mental stress (1.4–2.0), after adjustment for e.g. the relevant psychosocial factor at baseline. In conclusion, we found that several psychosocial factors predicted MSP and that MSP predicted several psychosocial factors. The results suggest a cumulative process in which adverse psychosocial factors and MSP influence each other.

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