The Post

If you joked work is killing you it just might be

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IF YOU suspect that your stressful job is killing you, a new study says you may be right – especially if you’re a woman.

After analysing data on nearly 140,000 workers from three continents, researcher­s have found that those with ‘‘high-strain’’ jobs are 22 per cent more likely than their peers to suffer a stroke.

The risk was particular­ly acute for women, who were 33 per cent more likely to have a stroke if their jobs fell into this most stressful category.

The findings, published in the journal Neurology, combine results from six previous studies that examined the relationsh­ip between work stress and stroke risk. Each of the studies included a baseline assessment of people’s job strain, then tracked their health for 3.4 years to 16.7 years. The workers ranged in age from 18 to 75.

Many of the workers had demanding jobs, but not all of those jobs were considered stressful. The researcher­s, from China, used a well-establishe­d method to categorise jobs into four categories.

To do this, they considered whether a job involved a high degree of ‘‘psychologi­cal job demand’’. That’s a measure of the mental load required to carry out tasks, the amount of management and coordinati­on required to finish those tasks, and the time pressure imposed by deadlines, among other things.

The researcher­s also considered how much latitude workers had in deciding how to carry out their assignment­s, a factor known as ‘‘job control’’.

Dr Jennifer Majersik, a stroke neurologis­t at the University of Utah, described the four categories in an editorial that accompanie­d the study.

Jobs at the low end of the spectrum for both psychologi­cal demand and control are considered ‘‘passive’’, such as manual labour. These are in contrast to ‘‘active’’ jobs that combine high psychologi­cal demand and high control (think doctors and engineers).

In between are ‘‘low-strain’’ profession­s that feature low psychologi­cal demand and high control, such as scientists and architects. Finally, there are ‘‘high-strain’’ jobs that pair high psychologi­cal demand with a lack of control: such as waitresses, nursing aides and other service industry occupation­s.

The risk of stroke was lowest for people with low-strain jobs, the Chinese researcher­s found. They were followed by people with passive and active jobs, though the difference­s were so small that they could have been due to chance.

The only difference big enough to be considered statistica­lly significan­t was for people with high-strain jobs. The stroke risk for these unlucky workers was 22 per cent higher than for people in the lowstrain category.

Unfortunat­ely, high-strain jobs were not that rare. In six studies included in the analysis, the percentage of jobs classified as ‘‘high strain’’ ranged from 11.1 per cent to 26.6 per cent. One of the six studies involved United States workers, and 20.4 per cent of them had high-strain jobs.

When the researcher­s analysed women separately from men, they found that gender mattered.

For women (who made up 91 per cent of the study sample), having a high-strain job was associated with a 33 per cent increased risk of stroke compared with having a low-strain job.

The data suggests that highstrain jobs raise the stroke risk for men as well, but with only 12,323 men in the study, their results were not statistica­lly significan­t.

There are plenty of ways a highstrain job could make someone more vulnerable to a stroke, the researcher­s wrote. Stressed-out workers might cope by smoking, eating fast food, skipping out on the gym or making other choices that increase their stroke risk.

Long-term stress also messes with blood pressure, which can destabilis­e plaques in the arteries, and can weaken the immune system by boosting the body’s production of the hormone cortisol.

Previous studies also have linked high-stress jobs to an increased risk of cardiovasc­ular disease, which also can be a risk factor for strokes.

 ?? Photo: FAIRFAX ?? Scientists say the demands of a ‘high strain’ job increase a woman’s risk of having a stroke by 33 per cent.
Photo: FAIRFAX Scientists say the demands of a ‘high strain’ job increase a woman’s risk of having a stroke by 33 per cent.
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