Publication type
Journal Article
Authors
Publication date
October 15, 2022
Summary:
Work schedule control has been linked to self-reported mental health, a measure that may suffer recall, social desirability, and common-method variance biases. The study proposes an alternative outcome measure to reduce survey measurement errors. It tests whether schedule control is associated with objective allostatic load biomarkers of chronic stress in a national working population, and whether the relationship depends on workers’ gender and gender role attitudes. A representative sample of 3677 British adults answered a cross-sectional survey on their work schedule control and provided blood samples in a nurse assessment. Allostatic load was constructed from 12 biomarkers across the cardiovascular, metabolic, and immune systems. The associations between work schedule control and allostatic load were tested for men and women with negative binomial models adjusting for covariates. Traditional versus egalitarian gender role attitude was then tested as a moderator. Control over work schedule is associated with lower or heathier allostatic load in women but not in men. The association is stronger among women who hold a more traditional gender role attitude towards the division of household labor. Women, especially those with traditional gender role attitudes, benefit most in allostatic load from work schedule control. Future research could use allostatic load biomarkers as a complementary indicator of quality of working life. Public health policymakers and organizations could use biomarkers to monitor the mental health risks of psychosocial work conditions and implement work-family policies to reduce the employed women’s work-family conflict.
Published in
Social Indicators Research
Volume and page numbers
Volume: 163 , p.1 -1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-022-02940-7
ISSN
3038300
Subjects
#547360