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BMJ Publishing Group, Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 9(68), p. 703-705

DOI: 10.1136/oem.2010.060632

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The attribution of work environment in explaining gender differences in long-term sickness absence: results from the prospective DREAM study

Journal article published in 2011 by M. Labriola, K. A. Holte, K. B. Christensen, H. Feveile, K. Alexanderson ORCID, T. Lund
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To identify differences in risk of long-term sickness absence between female and male employees in Denmark and to examine to what extent differences could be explained by work environment factors. METHODS: A cohort of 5026 employees (49.1% women, mean age 40.4years; 50.9% men, mean age 40.2years) was interviewed in 2000 regarding gender, age, family status, socio-economic position and psychosocial and physical work environment factors. The participants were followed for 18months in order to assess their incidence of long-term sickness absence exceeding 8 consecutive weeks. RESULTS: 298 workers (5.9%) received sickness absence compensation for 8weeks or more. Women had an excess risk of 37% compared to men, when adjusting for age, family status and socio-economic position. Physical work environment exposures could not explain this difference, whereas differences in psychosocial work environment exposures explained 32% of the differences in risk of long-term sickness absence between men and women, causing the effect of gender to become statistically insignificant. The combined effect of physical and psychosocial factors was similar, explaining 30% of the gender difference. CONCLUSION: Differences in psychosocial work environments in terms of emotional demands, reward at work, management quality and role conflicts, explained roughly 30% of women's excess long-term sickness absence risk. Assuming women and men had identical working conditions would leave the larger part of the gender difference in long-term sickness absence from work unexplained.