Background: Previous research has shown that job characteristics, private life and psychosocial factors partially account for gender difference in work absences because of sickness. Most studies have analysed these factors separately. The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether these explanatory factors act as mediators when they are considered simultaneously. Methods: The evaluated data set comprises the merger of two Belgian longitudinal studies, BELSTRESS III and SOMSTRESS. It includes 3821 workers (1541 men) aged 21-66 years, employed in eight organizations. A multiple mediation analysis was performed to explain the higher prevalence among women. Estimated factors were occupational grade, total number of paid working hours per ...
Division of domestic work by gender has been discussed as part of the explanation why women present ...
In the preceding four weeks one employee in ten was absent from work for at least one day on sick le...
Background: Women consistently have higher sickness absence than men. The double-burden hypothesis s...
Background: Previous research has shown that job characteristics, private life and psychosocial fact...
Women have much higher sickness absence rates than men. One prominent hypothesis is that this is a r...
International audienceBackgroundSome psychosocial work factors are associated with sickness absence,...
IIn the literature, sex is often presented as an individual determinant of sickness absence. A commo...
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect gender has on the relationship between work-rela...
International audienceBackground: The studies on the associations between psychosocial work factors ...
Previous research suggests that both men's and women's level of sickness absence may be systematical...
Division of domestic work by gender has been discussed as part of the explanation why women present ...
Objectives A considerable proportion of the working population reports a disability. These workers m...
Aims: Women have much higher rates of sickness absence than men, but the causes of the difference ar...
Previous research offers limited understanding as to why sickness absence is higher among women than...
Previous research offers limited understanding as to why sickness absence is higher among women than...
Division of domestic work by gender has been discussed as part of the explanation why women present ...
In the preceding four weeks one employee in ten was absent from work for at least one day on sick le...
Background: Women consistently have higher sickness absence than men. The double-burden hypothesis s...
Background: Previous research has shown that job characteristics, private life and psychosocial fact...
Women have much higher sickness absence rates than men. One prominent hypothesis is that this is a r...
International audienceBackgroundSome psychosocial work factors are associated with sickness absence,...
IIn the literature, sex is often presented as an individual determinant of sickness absence. A commo...
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect gender has on the relationship between work-rela...
International audienceBackground: The studies on the associations between psychosocial work factors ...
Previous research suggests that both men's and women's level of sickness absence may be systematical...
Division of domestic work by gender has been discussed as part of the explanation why women present ...
Objectives A considerable proportion of the working population reports a disability. These workers m...
Aims: Women have much higher rates of sickness absence than men, but the causes of the difference ar...
Previous research offers limited understanding as to why sickness absence is higher among women than...
Previous research offers limited understanding as to why sickness absence is higher among women than...
Division of domestic work by gender has been discussed as part of the explanation why women present ...
In the preceding four weeks one employee in ten was absent from work for at least one day on sick le...
Background: Women consistently have higher sickness absence than men. The double-burden hypothesis s...