Login / Signup

Employment Precarity and Increased Risk of Hazardous Occupational Exposures Among Residents of High Socioeconomic Hardship Neighborhoods.

Tessa BonneyKathleen M RospendaLinda ForstLorraine M ConroyDolores CastañedaSandra AvelarYvette CastañedaAdlaide HollowayJeni Hebert-Beirne
Published in: Annals of work exposures and health (2022)
Results highlight the importance of using community research approaches and robust measures of employment characteristics, such as the EPI, to evaluate associations between employment precarity and hazardous exposures. These results suggest that variability in employment situations and resultant relative employment precarity are important predictors of exposure to recognized occupational hazards. Findings also suggest that health inequities observed among precariously employed workers may be partly explained by increased risk for exposure to occupational hazards, which has implications for community health and should be investigated in future longitudinal research.
Keyphrases
  • mental illness
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • air pollution
  • risk assessment
  • cross sectional
  • current status
  • atomic force microscopy
  • social media
  • health promotion