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Gender, ageing, and shiftwork intolerance.
Ergonomics. 1993 Jan-Mar; 36(1-3):161-8.E

Abstract

The study investigated the hypothetical differences between male and female shiftworkers in their susceptibility to shiftwork-related health and social problems, with the special reference to the role of the age factor. The comparison concerned two matched-for-age-and-occupation groups of men and women, each of 83 persons, selected from the larger studied population of more than 700 workers in a Polish steel plant. The subjects were crane-operators employed in the same forward-rotated, three-shift, four-team shift system, 4:4:4 with shift changes at 06:00, 14:00, 22:00; and 48 h off following each shift block. The investigation comprised a battery of questionnaires on demographic characteristics, sleep quantity and quality, subjective health complaints, and opinions on shiftwork. The analysis of data revealed that men slept more than women, especially when working on the afternoon and night shifts. The differences became more striking and significant for all work shifts and days-off when related to declared individual sleep requirements. Women experienced more sleep disturbances than men and suffered more frequently from drowsiness during work, especially when working the morning shift. The ratings of subjective health were lower in women, with exception of respiratory complaints. Women generally suffered more than men from symptoms considered as specific to the 'intolerance syndrome', i.e. psychoneurotic, digestive, circulatory, and those of chronic fatigue. However, after passing the 'critical decade' of 40-50 years their subjective health generally improved, whereas in males one observed the consequent deterioration of health with advancing age. Women more often complained about their health and went to see the doctor, but on the other hand, they did not tend to quit shiftwork as often as did their male counterparts.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Ergonomics, University School of Medicine in Cracow, Poland.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

8440214

Citation

Ogińska, H, et al. "Gender, Ageing, and Shiftwork Intolerance." Ergonomics, vol. 36, no. 1-3, 1993, pp. 161-8.
Ogińska H, Pokorski J, Ogiński A. Gender, ageing, and shiftwork intolerance. Ergonomics. 1993;36(1-3):161-8.
Ogińska, H., Pokorski, J., & Ogiński, A. (1993). Gender, ageing, and shiftwork intolerance. Ergonomics, 36(1-3), 161-8.
Ogińska H, Pokorski J, Ogiński A. Gender, Ageing, and Shiftwork Intolerance. Ergonomics. 1993 Jan-Mar;36(1-3):161-8. PubMed PMID: 8440214.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Gender, ageing, and shiftwork intolerance. AU - Ogińska,H, AU - Pokorski,J, AU - Ogiński,A, PY - 1993/1/1/pubmed PY - 1993/1/1/medline PY - 1993/1/1/entrez SP - 161 EP - 8 JF - Ergonomics JO - Ergonomics VL - 36 IS - 1-3 N2 - The study investigated the hypothetical differences between male and female shiftworkers in their susceptibility to shiftwork-related health and social problems, with the special reference to the role of the age factor. The comparison concerned two matched-for-age-and-occupation groups of men and women, each of 83 persons, selected from the larger studied population of more than 700 workers in a Polish steel plant. The subjects were crane-operators employed in the same forward-rotated, three-shift, four-team shift system, 4:4:4 with shift changes at 06:00, 14:00, 22:00; and 48 h off following each shift block. The investigation comprised a battery of questionnaires on demographic characteristics, sleep quantity and quality, subjective health complaints, and opinions on shiftwork. The analysis of data revealed that men slept more than women, especially when working on the afternoon and night shifts. The differences became more striking and significant for all work shifts and days-off when related to declared individual sleep requirements. Women experienced more sleep disturbances than men and suffered more frequently from drowsiness during work, especially when working the morning shift. The ratings of subjective health were lower in women, with exception of respiratory complaints. Women generally suffered more than men from symptoms considered as specific to the 'intolerance syndrome', i.e. psychoneurotic, digestive, circulatory, and those of chronic fatigue. However, after passing the 'critical decade' of 40-50 years their subjective health generally improved, whereas in males one observed the consequent deterioration of health with advancing age. Women more often complained about their health and went to see the doctor, but on the other hand, they did not tend to quit shiftwork as often as did their male counterparts. SN - 0014-0139 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/8440214/Gender_ageing_and_shiftwork_intolerance_ L2 - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00140139308967868 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -