Work-Related Stress May Raise Women's Diabetes Risk Publish date: Dec 17, 2009 ![]() THURSDAY, Dec. 17 (HealthDay News) -- Middle-aged women who are under psychosocial stress at work have a higher risk of
developing diabetes than their non-stressed counterparts, according to a study in the December issue of Diabetes Care. Alexandros Heraclides, and colleagues at the University College London Medical School conducted a study of 5,895 Caucasian
middle-aged men and women who did not have diabetes at baseline and who were followed up for 15 years. For women, the risk of diabetes doubled when they reported experiencing low levels of work social support, but no such
association was found for men, the researchers note. When the investigators took socioeconomic position and outside work stressors
into account, there was no impact on the findings, while the effects of work-related stress were only attenuated by 20 percent
once the data was adjusted for obesity, health behaviors and other risk factors for type 2 diabetes. "High job demands, low job control, and low work social support were not individually associated with type 2 diabetes,
supporting the theory that the combination of the three is toxic to health," the authors write. "Despite the fact that the
reliability of the job demands scale is not high, we are confident that psychosocial work stress was accurately assessed in
our study using the iso-strain model, and that the observed association with incident type 2 diabetes is a valid one." Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved. | Featured JobsCoding Counselor Simple and accurate ICD-9 code search. Start Here Patient Education Print customized patient education handouts. Start Here Dermatology Diagnosis Identify skin diseases by age, gender, location. Start Here AHRQ Clinical Guidelines Objective findings on medical interventions. Start Here ![]() ![]() |