P-194 Sex difference of negative emotion and contributing factors among Chinese nightshift workers

IntroductionNightshift work is prevalent in developed and developing countries in which female nightshift workers are more vulnerable, particularly for mental health.ObjectiveThis study aims to investigate if the prevalence of negative emotion differ among male and female nightshift workers and expl...

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Published inOccupational and environmental medicine (London, England) Vol. 78; no. Suppl 1; p. A84
Main Authors Lap-ah TSE, Shelly, Wang, Feng, Li, Zhimin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London BMJ Publishing Group Ltd 22.10.2021
BMJ Publishing Group LTD
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Summary:IntroductionNightshift work is prevalent in developed and developing countries in which female nightshift workers are more vulnerable, particularly for mental health.ObjectiveThis study aims to investigate if the prevalence of negative emotion differ among male and female nightshift workers and explore the contributing factors using the baseline information of a prospective nightshift worker cohort in Shenzhen, China.MethodsWe recruited 5329 workers and collected their blood/urine samples from 5 industries at the baseline, but only included 834 workers from 2 companies into this report because other 3 companies mainly composed of male workers. We adopted a standardized questionnaire to collect information on lifetime nightshift work, lifestyle factors, housework demands and socio-demographic data.ResultsOverall, 510 workers were males (61.2%) and 324 were females (38.8%). More female than male workers were nightshift workers (90.1% vs. 82.7%), aged≥40 years (20.4% vs. 12.9%) and married (74.4% vs. 58.2%) but less females attained college or above (8.6% vs. 23.5%) and leisure-time exercises (32.7% vs. 50.0%). Significantly more female workers did different housework including cooking (12.7% vs. 9.6%), washing (50.6% vs. 31.4%) and taking care of children/elderly (20.4% vs. 12.2%), and the sex difference in housework demands was particularly prominent among nightshift workers. Female nightshift workers were more prone to negative emotion because of ‘feel exhaust or insufficient energy (40.1% vs. 32.2%)’, ‘worry of significant change of body weight (18.5% vs. 12.6%)’, ‘insomnia/poor sleep (31.5% vs. 21.3%)’, and ‘hard to concentration or forgetful (30.1% vs. 20.4%)’; however, there was no significant sex difference of negative emotion among daytime workers.ConclusionThis study reveals that female nightshift workers were more vulnerable to negative emotion, and nightshift work schedule and high housework burden are the contributing factors.
Bibliography:Poster
28th International Symposium on Epidemiology in Occupational Health (EPICOH 2021)
ISSN:1351-0711
1470-7926
DOI:10.1136/OEM-2021-EPI.227