Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 2017 December, 243(4)

The Association between Work-Related Stress and Autonomic Imbalance among Call Center Employees in Japan

MAMIKO ENOKI,1 ERI MAEDA,1 TOYOTO IWATA1 and KATSUYUKI MURATA1

1Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Akita University Graduate School of Medicine, Akita, Akita, Japan

There is little epidemiological evidence linking subjective stress to objective etiologic indicators. To clarify an association between work-related stress and autonomic nervous function, we examined call center employees (167 males and 371 females) undergoing electrocardiography (ECG) at the time of annual health checkups. The questionnaire was composed of the Brief Job Stress Questionnaire based on the demand-control-support model and the Social Readjustment Rating Scale including detailed contents of home stress. The Bazett's corrected QT (QTc) interval, QT index, and heart rate were obtained from the ECG data. The male employees showed significantly higher scores of job demand, job control, and supervisor support than the female ones. In the male employees, QT index indicating the extent of autonomic imbalance and heart rate were associated with high score of supervisor support and low score of coworker support (P < 0.05), but no significant relationships were seen between QTc interval and either job strain (i.e., job demand and job control) or home stress. By contrast, the female employees showed no significant links between any autonomic indicators and either work-related stress or home stress. These data suggest that work-related stress affected QT index in male employees suffering specific occupational stressors such as emotional abuse from unsatisfied customers. Specifically, supports from supervisors and coworkers were paradoxically associated with QT index, implying that supervisors may have failed to effectively support such male employees. Also, autonomic nervous function in male employees appears to be more vulnerable to work-related stress than that in female ones.

keywords —— autonomic nervous function; call center employees; demand-control-support model; electrocardiography; subjective job stress

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Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 2017, 243, 321-328

Correspondence: Katsuyuki Murata, M.D., Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Akita University Graduate School of Medicine, 1-1-1 Hondo, Akita, Akita 010-8543, Japan.

e-mail: winestem@med.akita-u.ac.jp