A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Characteristics of Workplace Psychosocial Resources and Risk of Diabetes: A Prospective Cohort Study




AuthorsXu Tianwei, Clark Alice J, Pentti Jaana, Rugulies Reiner, Lange Theis, Vahtera Jussi, Magnusson Hanson Linda L, Westerlund Hugo, Kivimäki Mika, Rod Naja H

PublisherAmerican Diabetes Association Inc.

Publication year2022

JournalDiabetes Care

Journal name in sourceDiabetes Care

Volume45

Issue1

First page 59

Last page66

eISSN1935-5548

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2337/dc20-2943

Web address https://doi.org/10.2337/dc20-2943


Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To examine whether characteristics of workplace psychosocial resources are associated with the risk of type 2 diabetes among employees.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS

Participants were 49,835 employees (77% women, aged 40–65 years, and diabetes free at baseline) from the Finnish Public Sector cohort study. Characteristics of horizontal (culture of collaboration and support from colleagues) and vertical (leadership quality and organizational procedural justice) psychosocial resources were self-reported. Incident type 2 diabetes (n = 2,148) was ascertained through linkage to electronic health records from national registers. We used latent class modeling to assess the clustering of resource characteristics. Cox proportional hazards models were used to examine the relationship between the identified clusters and risk of type 2 diabetes during 10.9 years of follow-up, adjusting for age, sex, marital status, educational level, type of employment contract, comorbidity, and diagnosed mental disorders.

RESULTS

We identified four patterns of workplace psychosocial resources: unfavorable, favorable vertical, favorable horizontal, and favorable vertical and horizontal. Compared with unfavorable, favorable vertical (hazard ratio 0.87 [95% CI 0.78; 0.97]), favorable horizontal (0.77 [0.67; 0.88]), and favorable vertical and horizontal (0.77 [0.68; 0.86]) resources were associated with a lower risk of type 2 diabetes, with the strongest associations seen in employees at age ≥55 years (Pinteraction = 0.03). These associations were robust to multivariable adjustments and were not explained by reverse causation.

CONCLUSIONS

A favorable culture of collaboration, support from colleagues, leadership quality, and organizational procedural justice are associated with a lower risk of employees developing type 2 diabetes than in those without such favorable workplace psychosocial resources.

This article contains supplementary material online at https://doi.org/10.2337/figshare.16775665.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 11:51