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Long-term adverse health outcomes of physical workplace violence: a 7-year population-based follow-up study
28
Citations
38
References
2018
Year
Physical ActivityViolence AssessmentInjury PreventionMental Health InterventionSocial Determinants Of HealthMental HealthWorker HealthSubstance Use DisordersHarm ReductionSocial HealthViolenceHospital AdmittancePublic HealthWorkplace ViolenceOccupational Health PsychologyRepresentative Survey DataHealth SciencesHealth PolicyPsychiatryPhysical Workplace ViolenceWork SafetyOccupational EpidemiologyEpidemiologyPatient SafetyAdult Mental HealthBehavioral HealthMedicineAggression
The aim of the present study was to analyse whether physical workplace violence increases the risk of long-term adverse health outcomes (i.e., high number of visits to the general practitioner, outpatient treatment, hospital admittance, antidepressant use, and/or having a mental disorder). The study was based on representative survey data from 2006 and 2010 (entitled “How are you?”) merged with register data for a 7-year follow-up period (N = 30,812). To examine if physical workplace violence was a predictor of adverse health outcomes, logistic regression models were conducted for the total follow-up period and for each follow-up year with the different outcome measures as the dependent variables. In the follow-up period, individuals who were exposed to physical workplace violence had a higher number of visits to the general practitioner, had more often received outpatient treatment, and had more often been admitted to hospital than their non-exposed counterparts. Moreover, exposed individuals had higher odds of using antidepressants in the last three follow-up years than did non-exposed individuals. The findings call for heightened attention to securing preventive as well as rehabilitative strategies to help victims of physical workplace violence with the aim of avoiding adverse long-term health consequences.
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