Title of article
The importance of low control at work and home on depression and anxiety: do these effects vary by gender and social class?
Author/Authors
Joan M. Griffin، نويسنده , , Rebecca Fuhrer، نويسنده , , Stephen A. Stansfeld، نويسنده , , Michael Marmot، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
16
From page
783
To page
798
Abstract
In this study we consider both a gender model, a model that focuses on the stress associated with social roles and conditions in the home environment, and a job model, which addresses the stressful characteristics of the work environment, to investigate patterns of womenʹs and menʹs psychological morbidity across different social positions. Using data from the Whitehall II Study, a longitudinal study of British civil servants, we hypothesise that a lack of control in the home and work environments affects depression and anxiety differently for women and men and across three social class groups.
Both women and men with low control either at work or at home had an increased risk of developing depression and anxiety. We did not find an interaction between low control at home and work. We did, however, find that the risks associated with low control either at home or work were not evenly distributed across different social positions, measured by employment grade. Women in the lowest or middle employment grades who also reported low control at work or home were at most risk for depression and anxiety. Men in the middle grade with low work control were at risk for depression while those in the lowest grade were at risk for anxiety. Men in the middle and highest grades, however, were at greatest risk for both outcomes if they reported low control at home.
We conclude that, in addition to social roles and characteristics of the work environment, future investigations of gender inequalities in health incorporate variables associated with control at home and social position.
Keywords
Home , depression , Anxiety , gender inequalities , work , control , Health inequalities
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
600958
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