Need for recovery after work and the subsequent risk of cardiovascular disease in a working population

scientific article published on June 2003

Need for recovery after work and the subsequent risk of cardiovascular disease in a working population is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1136/OEM.60.SUPPL_1.I83
P932PMC publication ID1765716
P698PubMed publication ID12782752
P5875ResearchGate publication ID279398883

P2093author name stringG M H Swaen
U Bültmann
I J Kant
L G P M van Amelsvoort
P2860cites workA follow-up study of job strain and heart disease among males in the NHANES1 populationQ24169444
Decision latitude, job strain, and myocardial infarction: a study of working men in Stockholm. The SHEEP Study Group. Stockholm Heart epidemiology ProgramQ28389445
Adverse health effects of high-effort/low-reward conditionsQ29615824
Psychological stress and cardiovascular disease: empirical demonstration of bias in a prospective observational study of Scottish men.Q33827857
Work stress and risk of cardiovascular mortality: prospective cohort study of industrial employeesQ34158562
An epidemiological approach to study fatigue in the working population: the Maastricht Cohort StudyQ35576720
Low job control and risk of coronary heart disease in Whitehall II (prospective cohort) study.Q36243131
Mental precursors of myocardial infarctionQ37595973
The influence of work characteristics on the need for recovery and experienced health: a study on coach driversQ40817467
Excess fatigue as a precursor of myocardial infarctionQ41274228
The influence of the work environment on cardiovascular health: a historical, conceptual, and methodological perspectiveQ41740550
Job stress and cardiovascular disease: a theoretic critical reviewQ41740584
The relation between work-induced neuroendocrine reactivity and recovery, subjective need for recovery, and health statusQ43548514
The psychosocial work environment of younger men surviving acute myocardial infarctionQ44498543
Measuring job stressors and studying the health impact of the work environment: an epidemiologic commentaryQ48766287
Vital exhaustion as risk indicator for myocardial infarction in women.Q51139016
Psychological distress as a risk factor for coronary heart disease in the Whitehall II StudyQ57241586
Need for recovery in the working population: Description and associations with fatigue and psychological distressQ61988411
Exhaustion as precursor of cardiac deathQ67551630
Exhaustion, psychological stressors in the work environment, and acute myocardial infarction in adult menQ67580703
Conceptualization and measurement of human disorder in life stress research: the problem of chronic disturbanceQ69499774
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectcardiovascular diseaseQ389735
P304page(s)i83-7
P577publication date2003-06-01
P1433published inOccupational and Environmental MedicineQ7075795
P1476titleNeed for recovery after work and the subsequent risk of cardiovascular disease in a working population
P478volume60 Suppl 1

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q37411952Abnormal liver function and central obesity associate with work-related fatigue among the Taiwanese workers
Q44091173Age as a moderator in the relationship between work-related characteristics, job dissatisfaction and need for recovery.
Q48250754Attenuation of vagal recovery during sleep and reduction of cortisol/melatonin ratio in late afternoon associate with prolonged daytime sleepiness among media workers with irregular shift work
Q49034684Comparison between the first and second versions of the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire: psychosocial risk factors for a high need for recovery after work
Q58161826Development of need for recovery from work over one year: a person-centered approach
Q50075202Differences in low back pain occurrence over a 6-month period between four recovery-stress groups
Q57282942Effectiveness of the Stand More AT (SMArT) Work intervention: cluster randomised controlled trial
Q47590037Effects of 12 months aerobic exercise intervention on work ability, need for recovery, productivity and rating of exertion among cleaners: a worksite RCT.
Q93645624Epilogue
Q94669266High need for recovery from work and sleep problems are associated with workers' unhealthy dietary habits
Q47596067Monitoring of need for recovery and prolonged fatigue within the working population: Evaluation of reliability and agreement over time
Q92342909Mystery Shopping and Well-Being of Service Workers in South Korea
Q48261784Need for recovery across work careers: the impact of work, health and personal characteristics
Q33847150Need for recovery from work in relation to age: a prospective cohort study
Q36112022Physical activity and relaxation in the work setting to reduce the need for recovery: what works for whom?
Q36144405Psychometric properties of the Need for Recovery after work scale: test-retest reliability and sensitivity to detect change
Q39716401Psychosocial work characteristics, need for recovery and musculoskeletal problems predict psychological distress in a sample of British workers
Q36360173Self-Reported Recovery from 2-Week 12-Hour Shift Work Schedules: A 14-Day Follow-Up
Q36332593Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?
Q37614606The Association between Work-Related Rumination and Heart Rate Variability: A Field Study
Q34361410The development of the Be Active & Relax "Vitality in Practice" (VIP) project and design of an RCT to reduce the need for recovery in office employees
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Q33646082Work-related fatigue: the specific case of highly educated women in the Netherlands
Q57241538Working while ill as a risk factor for serious coronary events: the Whitehall II study

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