Unstable workplace may up employee's heart attack risk
Washington, Oct 24 ANI: An 18-year study from
Finland has revealed that predictable workplaces are
healthy because when employees feel ambiguous about their role in the
organization and there is a lack of
clear-cut
communication, they might be at higher risk for
heart attacks over time. The study examined the possible link between
job control factors and
heart attacks, acute myocardial infarction, among 7,663 private sector employees. "The risk of MI was about 1.8 times higher in a disorganized setting than in an organized setting.
Clear organization of
work tasks matters," said lead study author
Ari Vaananen, from the Finnish
Institute of Occupational
Health in Helsinki. Although it has long been known that risk factors such as
smoking and a lack of
exercise can lead to
poor cardiac
health, the new study finds that characteristics of a
job, such as an employee's lack of control,
job awareness, unexpected changes,
job strain and
stress, could also lead to
poor cardiac
health. "We looked at the measure of predictability, how an employee views the clarity of
work goals and
work roles, their ability to foresee
work problems and how significant
work disturbances interrupt the
work process and outcome." Vaananen said. The researchers sent questionnaires to 12,173 employees in the multinational forest
industry who had worked for their
company for at least 24 months and who were initially free of
heart disease. In
all, 9,292 employees, primarily blue-collar workers, responded. The researchers looked at demographics, psychological distress,
medical conditions and lifestyle risk factors. During the 17-year follow-up period, 56 employees died of acute myocardial infarction and 316 had nonfatal
events.
Joan Gillman is the director of special
industry programs at the
School of
Business at
University of
Wisconsin-
Madison, said: "Not knowing what is expected in the workplace is stressful." Gillman said that educating the
work force is important to improved predictability. "The more that employees know what is expected of them and are given the proper training, the less stressful it is for them," Gillman said. The study appears in the December issue of the American Journal of
Public Health. ANI
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