Key term: psychosocial working condition

Original article 2023;49(7):496-505   pdf
Trajectories of psychosocial working conditions and all-cause and cause-specific mortality: a Swedish register-based cohort study
Pan K-Y, Almroth M, Nevriana A, Hemmingsson T, Kjellberg K, Falkstedt D
 
Original article 2023;49(4):249-258   pdf
Psychosocial working conditions and sickness absence among younger employees in Denmark: a register-based cohort study using job exposure matrices
Sørensen JK, Pedersen J, Burr H, Holm A, Lallukka T, Lund T, Melchior M, Rod NH, Rugulies R, Sivertsen B, Stansfeld S, Christensen KB, Madsen IEH
 
Editorial 2021;47(7):483-487   pdf full text
Understanding the impact of psychosocial working conditions on workers’ health: we have come a long way, but are we there yet?
Madsen IEH, Rugulies R
 
Original article 2018;44(2):183-191   pdf full text
Do resources buffer the prospective association of psychosocial work stress with depression? Longitudinal evidence from ageing workers
Lunau T, Wahrendorf M, Müller A, Wright B, Dragano N
 
Original article 2017;43(6):587-594   pdf full text
Changes in working conditions and major weight gain among normal- and overweight midlife employees
Niskanen R, Holstila A, Rahkonen O, Lallukka T
 
Original article 2017;43(1):50-58   pdf full text
Psychosocial job quality and mental health among young workers: a fixed-effects regression analysis using 13 waves of annual data
Milner A, Krnjacki L, LaMontagne AD
 
Original article 2016;42(4):299-308   pdf full text
Joint association of sleep problems and psychosocial working conditions with registered long-term sickness absence. A Danish cohort study
Madsen IEH, Larsen AD, Thorsen SV, Pejtersen JH, Rugulies R, Sivertsen B
 
Original article 2015;41(6):511-518   pdf full text
Changes in working conditions and physical health functioning among midlife and ageing employees
Mänty M, Kouvonen A, Lallukka T, Lahti J, Lahelma E, Rahkonen O
 
Original article 2013;39(4):351-360   pdf full text
Psychosocial working conditions, occupational groups, and risk of disability pension due to mental diagnoses: a cohort study of 43 000 Swedish twins
Samuelsson Å, Ropponen A, Alexanderson K, Svedberg P