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Journal Article

Citation

Lee BJ, Lamichhane DK, Jung DY, Moon SH, Kim SJ, Kim HC. Ind. Health 2015; 54(3): 237-245.

Affiliation

Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Inha University Hospital, South Korea.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, National Institute of Industrial Health, Japan)

DOI

10.2486/indhealth.2015-0191

PMID

26726830

Abstract

This study was conducted to examine how each psychosocial factor on working conditions is related to a worker's well-being. Data from the 2011 Korean Working Conditions Survey were analyzed for 33,569 employed workers aged ≥15 yr. Well-being was evaluated through the WHO-5 questionnaire and variables about occupational psychosocial factors were classified into eight categories. The prevalence ratios were estimated using Poisson regression model. Overall, 44.3% of men and 57.4% of women were in a low well-being group. In a univariate analysis, most of the psychosocial factors on working conditions are significantly related with a worker's low well-being, except for insufficient job autonomy in both genders and job insecurity for males only. After adjusting for sociodemographic and structural factors on working conditions, job dissatisfaction, lack of reward, lack of social support, violence and discrimination at work still showed a statistically significant association with a worker's low well-being for both genders. We found that psychosocial working conditions were associated with the workers' well-being.


Language: en

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