Work
Stress Leads to Heart Disease and Diabetes
Chronic stress at work and the metabolic syndrome:
prospective study BMJ Online First. Stress at
work is an important risk factor for the development
of heart disease and diabetes,
finds a study published online by the BMJ today.
Stress at work has been linked with heart
disease, but the biological processes were
unclear. This study provides new evidence for
the biological plausibility of the link between
work stress and heart disease.
Researchers examined the association between
work stress and the metabolic syndrome (a cluster
of factors that increases the risk of heart
disease and type 2 diabetes) in 10,308 British
civil servants aged between 35 and 55, over
a 14 year period.
Work stress was measured on four occasions
between 1985 and 1999. Components of the metabolic
syndrome, such as obesity, high blood pressure,
and high cholesterol levels, were measured
between 1997 and 1999. Social position and
health damaging behaviours, such as smoking,
heavy alcohol consumption, and lack of exercise,
were also recorded.
A dose-response relation was found between
exposure to job stress and the metabolic syndrome,
even after adjusting for other risk factors.
For example, men with chronic work stress were
nearly twice as likely to develop the syndrome
than those with no exposure to work stress.
Women with chronic work stress were also more
likely to have the syndrome, but they formed
a small group.
Both men and women from lower employment grades
were more likely to have the syndrome, confirming
previous reports that the syndrome has a social
gradient.
The association between the metabolic syndrome
and exposure to health damaging behaviours
was stronger among men than women. Poor diet
(no fruit and vegetable consumption), smoking,
heavy alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity
were all associated with higher odds of the
syndrome.
Despite some study limitations, a dose-response
relation exists between exposure to work stress
and the metabolic syndrome, even after other
risk factors are taken into account, say the
authors.
One possible explanation is that prolonged
exposure to work stress may affect the nervous
system. Alternatively, chronic stress may reduce
biological resilience and thus disturb the
body’s physiological balance (homoeostasis).
This study provides evidence for the biological
plausibility of psychosocial stress mechanisms
linking stressors from everyday life with heart
disease, they conclude. |