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On effort–reward imbalance and depression

机译:努力-奖励不平衡和沮丧

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The review by Rugulies et al (1) in this issue of the Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health is published almost at the same time as a Dragano et al article (2) in the journal Epidemiology on effort–reward imbalance (ERI) at work and incident coronary heart disease. The latter is based on the European collaborative individual participant data (IPD) cohort. Both articles are based exclusively on prospective studies with information about work environment and health status at one point and illness at a later point. Moreover, both illustrate that it is possible to identify increased near-future illness risk (depression in Rugulies et al and coronary heart disease in Dragano et al) by asking employees about perceived effort devoted to work and perceived degree of reward for that effort combining it into a measure of the balance between effort and reward.In the early 1990s, Siegrist (3) introduced the ERI model in epidemiology. The most updated summaries of its theory and epidemiological findings can be found in the recently published book edited by Siegrist & Wahrendorf (4). It postulates that lack of reciprocity between high “costs” (spending high effort at work) and low benefits (such as salary, possibility for promotion and positive feedback) produces emotional distress affecting both mental and physical health. At the time of its introduction, many researchers perceived this theoretical model as competing with the demand–control model that Karasek had introduced 15 years earlier (5). However, it was shown that the two models supplemented each other because higher risk estimates were found when they were combined (6, 7); in addition, there were interesting gender differences in the way the risk patterns featured. Therefore epidemiologists in the field have mostly decided to retain both models in their studies. The Dragano article actually again shows that combining the two models provides higher estimates of heart disease risk than the use of one alone.In the early stages, Siegrist proposed two aspects of effort, namely intrinsic and extrinsic, that were combined in one measure of effort. The intrinsic aspect was presented as a personal inner drive and has later been re-labelled “over-commitment”. In the contemporary version of the model, the commitment dimension is regarded as a mediator and the Rugulies et al and Dragano et al studies only include the extrinsic aspect of effort. Over-commitment is regarded as a personality trait by some authors, but according to Siegrist’s original theory, over-commitment arises in subjects who are exposed to long-lasting under-reward for high extrinsic effort.
机译:Rugulies等人(1)在《斯堪的纳维亚工作,环境与健康杂志》上发表的评论几乎与德拉格诺等人(2)在关于努力-报酬不平衡(ERI)的流行病学杂志上同时发表。在工作中和突发冠心病。后者基于欧洲协作个人参与者数据(IPD)队列。这两篇文章都是专门基于前瞻性研究,并在某一时间提供有关工作环境和健康状况的信息,而在以后的某一时刻提供有关疾病的信息。此外,两者都表明,通过向员工询问致力于工作的感知努力以及将其结合起来的感知回报程度,可以识别出未来疾病风险增加(Rugulies等人的抑郁症和Dragano等人的冠心病)在衡量努力和报酬之间的平衡方面,Siegrist(3)在1990年代初期将ERI模型引入了流行病学。有关其理论和流行病学发现的最新摘要,可以在由Siegrist&Wahrendorf编辑的最新出版的书中找到(4)。它假设高“成本”(花大量的工作时间)和低收益(例如薪水,晋升的可能性和积极的反馈)之间缺乏互惠感,会造成情绪困扰,影响身心健康。在引入该模型时,许多研究人员认为该理论模型与15年前Karasek提出的需求控制模型相竞争(5)。然而,事实表明,这两个模型是相辅相成的,因为将它们组合在一起时发现了更高的风险估计(6、7)。此外,风险模式的表现方式也存在有趣的性别差异。因此,该领域的流行病学家大多决定保留这两种模型。 Dragano的文章实际上再次表明,与单独使用一个模型相比,结合使用两种模型可以提供更高的心脏病风险估计。在早期阶段,Siegrist提出了两个方面的努力,即内在性和外在性,将它们组合为一种努力。内在方面表现为个人内在动力,后来被重新标记为“过度承诺”。在模型的当代版本中,承诺维度被视为中介者,Rugulies等人和Dragano等人的研究仅包括努力的外在方面。过度承诺被某些作者视为一种人格特质,但根据齐格里斯特(Siegrist)的原始理论,过度承诺发生于因长期付出外在努力而长期处于低薪状态的受试者。

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