Increasing Trends in Physical and Mental Health Problems among US Workers in Different Job Sectors During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Gopal K Singh, Hyunjung Lee, R. Azuine
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引用次数: 6
Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has had a substantial adverse impact on workers’ employment and physical and mental health. However, job losses, job-related household income shocks, and their related physical and mental health problems have not been well-documented. Using temporal, nationally representative data, this study examines inequalities in job-related income losses and their resultant health impact among US workers aged 18-64 years in different job sectors during the pandemic.
Methods: Using April, August, and December 2020 rounds of the US Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey (N=56,156, 82,173, and 51,500), job-related income losses among workers in various job sectors and associated impacts on self-assessed health, depression, anxiety, worry, and lack of interest were analyzed by multivariable logistic regression.
Results: In December 2020, 64.0% of self-employed and 66.3% of unemployed adults reported that they or someone in their household experienced a loss of employment income since the start of the pandemic in March 2020. This percentage was the lowest for the public sector (35.2%) and non-profit-sector (45.0%) workers. Job/income losses increased by 26% between April and December for workers in the private and non-profit sectors. Prevalence of fair/poor overall health, serious depression, serious anxiety, serious worry, and serious lack of interest increased substantially during the pandemic for workers in all sectors, with the self-employed, those in the family business, and the unemployed experiencing the highest risk and those in the government/public and non-profit sectors experiencing the lowest risk of poor physical and mental health. Workers in all sectors reporting job-related income losses experienced approximately 2-to-4-fold higher odds of poor overall health, serious depression, serious anxiety, serious worry, and serious lack of interest, compared to public-sector workers with no job/income losses, controlling for covariates.
Conclusion and Implications for Translation: Job-related income losses and prevalence of poor overall health and mental health among workers in all sectors increased markedly during the pandemic, with the self-employed, family business, and unemployed workers being especially vulnerable to poor health, depression, anxiety, and stress.
Copyright © 2021 Singh, et al. Published by Global Health and Education Projects, Inc. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in this journal, is properly cited.
新冠肺炎大流行期间,美国不同就业部门工人的身心健康问题呈上升趋势
背景:新冠肺炎大流行对工人的就业和身心健康产生了重大不利影响。然而,失业、与工作相关的家庭收入冲击及其相关的身心健康问题并没有得到充分的记录。这项研究使用具有全国代表性的时间数据,调查了疫情期间不同工作部门18-64岁美国工人在工作相关收入损失方面的不平等及其对健康的影响。方法:使用2020年4月、8月和12月的美国人口普查局家庭脉搏调查(N=56156、82173和51500),通过多变量逻辑回归分析不同工作部门工人的工作相关收入损失以及对自我评估的健康、抑郁、焦虑、担忧和兴趣缺乏的相关影响。结果:2020年12月,64.0%的自营职业者和66.3%的失业成年人报告称,自2020年3月疫情开始以来,他们或家里的某个人经历了就业收入的损失。这一比例在公共部门(35.2%)和非营利部门(45.0%)的工人中最低。4月至12月,私营和非营利部门工人的工作/收入损失增加了26%。在疫情期间,所有行业的工人,包括自营职业者、家族企业的工人,总体健康状况尚可/较差、严重抑郁、严重焦虑、严重担忧和严重缺乏兴趣的患病率大幅上升,失业者面临的风险最高,政府/公共和非营利部门的失业者身心健康状况不佳的风险最低。在控制协变量的情况下,与没有工作/收入损失的公共部门工人相比,所有部门报告工作相关收入损失的工人总体健康状况不佳、严重抑郁、严重焦虑、严重担忧和严重缺乏兴趣的几率高出约2-4倍。结论和翻译意义:在疫情期间,所有部门工人中与工作相关的收入损失以及整体健康和心理健康状况不佳的患病率显著增加,自营职业者、家族企业和失业工人尤其容易受到健康状况不佳、抑郁、焦虑和压力的影响。版权所有©2021 Singh等人,由Global Health and Education Projects,股份有限公司出版。这是一篇根据知识共享署名许可证(CC by 4.0)条款分发的开放获取文章,该许可证允许在任何媒体上不受限制地使用、分发和复制,前提是首次发表在本杂志上的原创作品被适当引用。
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