"Shift and Night Work and All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality: Prospective Results From the STRESSJEM Study"
by Niedhammer, Isabelle; Coutrot, Thomas; Geoffroy-Perez, Béatrice; Chastang, Jean-François (2022)
Abstract
The literature remains sparse and inconclusive about the impact of shift and night work on mortality, and still more on specific causes of death. The objectives were to explore the prospective associations between exposure to shift and night work and all-cause and cause-specific mortality. The study was based on a large national representative French prospective cohort of 1,511,456 employees followed up from 1976 to 2002. Exposure to shift and night work relied on a job-exposure matrix, and 3 time-varying measures (current, cumulative, and recency-weighted cumulative exposure) were constructed. Mortality and causes of death were provided by the national registry, and all-cause, cardiovascular, cancer and preventable mortality, and suicide were studied. Cox proportional hazards models were performed to study the associations between shift and night work and mortality. During follow-up, 22,105 deaths occurred for all-cause mortality. In the study of mortality until the end of last job during follow-up, shift and/or night work were associated with all-cause, cardiovascular, cancer and preventable mortality, and suicide (except night without shift work with cancer mortality and suicide) among men. Shift work (especially shift without night work) was associated with all-cause, cancer and preventable mortality among women. The results were similar for current, cumulative, and recency-weighted cumulative exposure. Associations were found for more detailed causes of death: cerebrovascular diseases for both genders, ischemic heart diseases, respiratory cancers, smoking-related mortality, and external causes of death among men, and breast cancer among women. In the study of mortality until the end of follow-up, some additional associations were found among women between night work and all-cause and preventable mortality, and suicide, suggesting long-term or delayed exposure effects. The study may, however, be underpowered to detect all the exposure-outcome associations, especially among women. More research and prevention are needed to reduce mortality among shift and night workers.
Keywords
Cancer Mortality, Cardiovascular Mortality, Mortality, Night Work, Preventable Mortality, Shift Work, Suicide, Time SchedulesThemes
Coutrot, Mortality, Pathologies of WorkLinks to Reference
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07487304221092103
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35502698
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9149517
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