Scientific article 2020
Workplace Violence and Long-term Sickness Absence: Assessment of the Potential Buffering Effect of Social Support in Two Occupational Cohort Studies
Authors:
- Sofie Have Hoffmann
- Jakob Bue Bjørner
- Tianwei Xu
- Jesper Mortensen
- Eszter Török
- Hugo Westerlund
- Viktor Persson
- Birgit Aust
- Naja Hulvej Rod
- Alice Jessie Clark
- Labour Market Labour Market
Abstract
Objectives:
We aimed to determine the effect of workplace violence on long-term sickness absence, and whether social support from supervisors and colleagues buffer this effect.
Methods:
Information on workplace violence and social support were derived from the Danish Work Environment Cohort Study in 2000, 2005, and 2010 and the Swedish Longitudinal Occupational Survey of Health in 2006 and 2008. Individual- and joint-effects on register-based long-term sickness absence were determined using logistic regression models for repeated measurements. Cohort-specific estimates were combined in random effect meta-analyses.
Results:
Workplace violence and low social support were independently associated with a higher risk of long-term sickness absence, and we did not find evidence of an interaction.
Conclusion:
Exposure to workplace violence is a risk factor for long-term sickness absence while social support is associated with a lower risk of long-term sickness absence.
Objectives:
We aimed to determine the effect of workplace violence on long-term sickness absence, and whether social support from supervisors and colleagues buffer this effect.
Methods:
Information on workplace violence and social support were derived from the Danish Work Environment Cohort Study in 2000, 2005, and 2010 and the Swedish Longitudinal Occupational Survey of Health in 2006 and 2008. Individual- and joint-effects on register-based long-term sickness absence were determined using logistic regression models for repeated measurements. Cohort-specific estimates were combined in random effect meta-analyses.
Results:
Workplace violence and low social support were independently associated with a higher risk of long-term sickness absence, and we did not find evidence of an interaction.
Conclusion:
Exposure to workplace violence is a risk factor for long-term sickness absence while social support is associated with a lower risk of long-term sickness absence.
Authors
- Sofie Have HoffmannJakob Bue BjørnerTianwei XuJesper MortensenEszter TörökHugo WesterlundViktor PerssonBirgit AustNaja Hulvej RodAlice Jessie Clark
About this publication
Published in
Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine