Title
The Relationship Between Workplace Stressors and Mortality and Health Costs in the United States.
Abstract
Even though epidemiological evidence links specific workplace stressors to health outcomes, the aggregate contribution of these factors to overall mortality and health spending in the United States is not known. In this paper, we build a model to estimate the excess mortality and incremental health expenditures associated with exposure to the following 10 workplace stressors: unemployment, lack of health insurance, exposure to shift work, long working hours, job insecurity, work-family conflict, low job control, high job demands, low social support at work, and low organizational justice. Our model uses input parameters obtained from publicly accessible data sources. We estimated health spending from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey and joint probabilities of workplace exposures from the General Social Survey, and we conducted a meta-analysis of the epidemiological literature to estimate the relative risks of poor health outcomes associated with exposure to these stressors. The model was designed to overcome limitations with using inputs from multiple data sources. Specifically, the model separately derives optimistic and conservative estimates of the effect of multiple workplace exposures on health, and uses optimization to calculate upper and lower bounds around each estimate, which accounts for the correlation between exposures. We find that more than 120,000 deaths per year and approximately 5%-8% of annual healthcare costs are associated with and may be attributable to how U.S. companies manage their work forces. Our results suggest that more attention should be paid to management practices as important contributors to health outcomes and costs in the United States.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1287/mnsc.2014.2115
MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Keywords
Field
DocType
occupational health,health costs,mortality,applied optimization
Health care,Economics,Economic growth,Medical Expenditure Panel Survey,Microeconomics,Unemployment,Job control,Environmental health,Social support,Occupational safety and health,General Social Survey,Shift work
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
62
2
0025-1909
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
3
0.66
1
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Joel Goh11649.07
Jeffrey Pfeffer29426.71
Stefanos A. Zenios333945.72