University of California Irvine College of Medicine--COEH
THE WORK ENVIRONMENT AND CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE IN CLINICAL PRACTICE

Session 2. SOCIAL EPIDEMIOLOGY OF CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE

Date and Time: Tuesday, December 11th, 2:30-4:30 P.M.
Lecturer: Peter Schnall
Prepared by: Peter Schnall, Karen Belkic and Paul Landsbergis


Materials to be distributed: ERI, JCQ, GHQ, General and Specific OSI Questionnaires

Practical Exercise/Instruction: Each participant will complete these for one working person.

Summary:

Working people develop a wide variety of illnesses during their working lives, manifested in time lost from work, disability, physical incapacity, psychological distress and ultimately morbidity and mortality. How/whether these manifestations are connected to work is a critically important issue for those in the fields of medicine, occupational and public health. We will introduce the social epidemiologic approach, in which the workplace is viewed as a key determinant of a wide variety of behavioral and health outcomes. In other words, we focus upon the workplace as a relatively distal cause of these outcomes and view personality and individual factors as more proximal. Through viewing of a segment of Charlie Chaplin in the film "Modern Times", we present two approaches, one of which focuses on individual coping and the other on the impact of the workplace on the individual. We present a brief overview of the field of stress research, and then examine in depth the historical origins of theoretical models of workplace psychosocial stressors that have been empirically validated, including the Demand-Control-Support (DCS) model and the Effort Reward Imbalance (ERI) model.

Basic Readings:

(1) Why the workplace and cardiovascular disease? In: Schnall PL, Belkic K, Landsbergis PA, Baker D. (eds.) The Workplace and Cardiovascular Disease. Occupational Medicine: State of the Art Reviews. 2000; 15: 1-5.

(2) Stress. Baker D. and Karasek R. In: Levy BS. and Wegman DH. (Eds.) Occupational Health. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, 2000; 419-437.

Supplemental:

(3) Health, Productivity and Work Life in Karasek RA, Theorell T. Healthy Work: Stress, productivity and the reconstruction of working life. New York. Basic Books, Inc., 1990. Pgs 1-31.


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